Hugentobler, Jason A; Gupta, Resmi; Slater, Robert; Paterno, Mark V; Riley, Michael A; Quatman-Yates, Catherine
Influence of Age on Postconcussive Postural Control Measures and Future Implications for Assessment Journal Article
In: Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine, vol. 26, no. 6, pp. 510–517, 2016, ISBN: 1050642X.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: ADOLESCENCE, AGE distribution (Demography), ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder, CORRELATION (Statistics), DATA analysis, DATA analysis -- Software, DESCRIPTIVE statistics, DISEASE complications, EQUILIBRIUM (Physiology), LONGITUDINAL method, MEDICAL history taking, MULTIPLE regression analysis, postconcussion syndrome, PROBABILITY theory, Questionnaires, SEVERITY of illness index, SEX distribution (Demography), STATISTICS
@article{Hugentobler2016,
title = {Influence of Age on Postconcussive Postural Control Measures and Future Implications for Assessment},
author = {Hugentobler, Jason A and Gupta, Resmi and Slater, Robert and Paterno, Mark V and Riley, Michael A and Quatman-Yates, Catherine},
isbn = {1050642X},
year = {2016},
date = {2016-01-01},
journal = {Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine},
volume = {26},
number = {6},
pages = {510--517},
abstract = {Objective: To examine the influence of age, sex, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) status, previous history of concussion, and days since injury on postconcussion postural control assessment in adolescents who have suffered a concussion. Design: Prospective cohort study. Setting: Hospital-based outpatient clinic. Participants: Seventy-one participants (42 males; 29 females) with mean age 14.14 ± 2.44. Independent Variables: Age, sex, previous concussion history, ADHD status, total and severity of postconcussion symptoms, and days since injury. Main Outcome Measures: Total Balance Error Scoring System score, path length, center-of-pressure (COP) area, sample entropy, and Romberg quotient. Results: Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients were calculated to test for potential associations between the continuous participant characteristics and the postural control variables. Spearman correlation was used to test the association between symptom severity and the postural control variables. Standard multiple regression was used to model the extent to which participant characteristics accounted for the variance in the postural sway variables. Age was significantly associated with all of the postural sway variables except COP area for the eyes open condition and sample entropy in the anterior-posterior direction for the eyes closed condition. Sex, ADHD status, and previous concussion history did not significantly predict postural control scores. Conclusions: Age significantly influences scores on common postconcussion postural control assessments. Clinical Relevance: This study demonstrates that age is a critical factor that needs to be accounted for to improve the clinical appropriateness and utility of current postconcussion postural control assessments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]},
keywords = {ADOLESCENCE, AGE distribution (Demography), ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder, CORRELATION (Statistics), DATA analysis, DATA analysis -- Software, DESCRIPTIVE statistics, DISEASE complications, EQUILIBRIUM (Physiology), LONGITUDINAL method, MEDICAL history taking, MULTIPLE regression analysis, postconcussion syndrome, PROBABILITY theory, Questionnaires, SEVERITY of illness index, SEX distribution (Demography), STATISTICS},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Resch, Jacob E; Brown, Cathleen N; Baumgartner, Ted A; Macciocchi, Stephen N; Walpert, Kimberly P; Ferrara, Michael S
Influence of Mood State on the ImPACT Journal Article
In: Athletic Training & Sports Health Care, vol. 5, no. 6, pp. 272–281, 2013, ISBN: 19425864.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: *COLLEGE students, *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests, *SELF-evaluation, AFFECT (Psychology), ANALYSIS of variance, Clinical Trials, COGNITIVE testing, COMPUTER-assisted medical diagnosis, CORRELATION (Statistics), DATA analysis, DATA analysis -- Software, DESCRIPTIVE statistics, Neuropsychological Tests, RANDOMIZED controlled trials, REPEATED measures design, RESEARCH -- Evaluation, RESEARCH -- Methodology, RESEARCH methodology evaluation, SAMPLING (Statistics), STATISTICS, T-test (Statistics)
@article{Resch2013b,
title = {Influence of Mood State on the ImPACT},
author = {Resch, Jacob E and Brown, Cathleen N and Baumgartner, Ted A and Macciocchi, Stephen N and Walpert, Kimberly P and Ferrara, Michael S},
isbn = {19425864},
year = {2013},
date = {2013-01-01},
journal = {Athletic Training \& Sports Health Care},
volume = {5},
number = {6},
pages = {272--281},
abstract = {The Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing (ImPACT) is reported to possess variable reliability potentially due to a variety of factors, including mood. This study examined the influence of mood on ImPACT performance. A repeated measures design was used to assess 104 healthy, college-aged students. Participants completed the Profile of Mood States-Brief (POMS-B) and the ImPACT at days 1, 45, and 50. Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated for the POMS-B and ImPACT composite scores. At day 1, the ImPACT's Impulse Control composite score was significantly correlated to POMS-B Fatigue-Inertia mood state (-0.23},
keywords = {*COLLEGE students, *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests, *SELF-evaluation, AFFECT (Psychology), ANALYSIS of variance, Clinical Trials, COGNITIVE testing, COMPUTER-assisted medical diagnosis, CORRELATION (Statistics), DATA analysis, DATA analysis -- Software, DESCRIPTIVE statistics, Neuropsychological Tests, RANDOMIZED controlled trials, REPEATED measures design, RESEARCH -- Evaluation, RESEARCH -- Methodology, RESEARCH methodology evaluation, SAMPLING (Statistics), STATISTICS, T-test (Statistics)},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Hugentobler, Jason A; Gupta, Resmi; Slater, Robert; Paterno, Mark V; Riley, Michael A; Quatman-Yates, Catherine
Influence of Age on Postconcussive Postural Control Measures and Future Implications for Assessment Journal Article
In: Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine, vol. 26, no. 6, pp. 510–517, 2016, ISBN: 1050642X.
@article{Hugentobler2016,
title = {Influence of Age on Postconcussive Postural Control Measures and Future Implications for Assessment},
author = {Hugentobler, Jason A and Gupta, Resmi and Slater, Robert and Paterno, Mark V and Riley, Michael A and Quatman-Yates, Catherine},
isbn = {1050642X},
year = {2016},
date = {2016-01-01},
journal = {Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine},
volume = {26},
number = {6},
pages = {510--517},
abstract = {Objective: To examine the influence of age, sex, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) status, previous history of concussion, and days since injury on postconcussion postural control assessment in adolescents who have suffered a concussion. Design: Prospective cohort study. Setting: Hospital-based outpatient clinic. Participants: Seventy-one participants (42 males; 29 females) with mean age 14.14 ± 2.44. Independent Variables: Age, sex, previous concussion history, ADHD status, total and severity of postconcussion symptoms, and days since injury. Main Outcome Measures: Total Balance Error Scoring System score, path length, center-of-pressure (COP) area, sample entropy, and Romberg quotient. Results: Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients were calculated to test for potential associations between the continuous participant characteristics and the postural control variables. Spearman correlation was used to test the association between symptom severity and the postural control variables. Standard multiple regression was used to model the extent to which participant characteristics accounted for the variance in the postural sway variables. Age was significantly associated with all of the postural sway variables except COP area for the eyes open condition and sample entropy in the anterior-posterior direction for the eyes closed condition. Sex, ADHD status, and previous concussion history did not significantly predict postural control scores. Conclusions: Age significantly influences scores on common postconcussion postural control assessments. Clinical Relevance: This study demonstrates that age is a critical factor that needs to be accounted for to improve the clinical appropriateness and utility of current postconcussion postural control assessments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Resch, Jacob E; Brown, Cathleen N; Baumgartner, Ted A; Macciocchi, Stephen N; Walpert, Kimberly P; Ferrara, Michael S
Influence of Mood State on the ImPACT Journal Article
In: Athletic Training & Sports Health Care, vol. 5, no. 6, pp. 272–281, 2013, ISBN: 19425864.
@article{Resch2013b,
title = {Influence of Mood State on the ImPACT},
author = {Resch, Jacob E and Brown, Cathleen N and Baumgartner, Ted A and Macciocchi, Stephen N and Walpert, Kimberly P and Ferrara, Michael S},
isbn = {19425864},
year = {2013},
date = {2013-01-01},
journal = {Athletic Training \& Sports Health Care},
volume = {5},
number = {6},
pages = {272--281},
abstract = {The Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing (ImPACT) is reported to possess variable reliability potentially due to a variety of factors, including mood. This study examined the influence of mood on ImPACT performance. A repeated measures design was used to assess 104 healthy, college-aged students. Participants completed the Profile of Mood States-Brief (POMS-B) and the ImPACT at days 1, 45, and 50. Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated for the POMS-B and ImPACT composite scores. At day 1, the ImPACT's Impulse Control composite score was significantly correlated to POMS-B Fatigue-Inertia mood state (-0.23},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Hugentobler, Jason A; Gupta, Resmi; Slater, Robert; Paterno, Mark V; Riley, Michael A; Quatman-Yates, Catherine
Influence of Age on Postconcussive Postural Control Measures and Future Implications for Assessment Journal Article
In: Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine, vol. 26, no. 6, pp. 510–517, 2016, ISBN: 1050642X.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: ADOLESCENCE, AGE distribution (Demography), ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder, CORRELATION (Statistics), DATA analysis, DATA analysis -- Software, DESCRIPTIVE statistics, DISEASE complications, EQUILIBRIUM (Physiology), LONGITUDINAL method, MEDICAL history taking, MULTIPLE regression analysis, postconcussion syndrome, PROBABILITY theory, Questionnaires, SEVERITY of illness index, SEX distribution (Demography), STATISTICS
@article{Hugentobler2016,
title = {Influence of Age on Postconcussive Postural Control Measures and Future Implications for Assessment},
author = {Hugentobler, Jason A and Gupta, Resmi and Slater, Robert and Paterno, Mark V and Riley, Michael A and Quatman-Yates, Catherine},
isbn = {1050642X},
year = {2016},
date = {2016-01-01},
journal = {Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine},
volume = {26},
number = {6},
pages = {510--517},
abstract = {Objective: To examine the influence of age, sex, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) status, previous history of concussion, and days since injury on postconcussion postural control assessment in adolescents who have suffered a concussion. Design: Prospective cohort study. Setting: Hospital-based outpatient clinic. Participants: Seventy-one participants (42 males; 29 females) with mean age 14.14 ± 2.44. Independent Variables: Age, sex, previous concussion history, ADHD status, total and severity of postconcussion symptoms, and days since injury. Main Outcome Measures: Total Balance Error Scoring System score, path length, center-of-pressure (COP) area, sample entropy, and Romberg quotient. Results: Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients were calculated to test for potential associations between the continuous participant characteristics and the postural control variables. Spearman correlation was used to test the association between symptom severity and the postural control variables. Standard multiple regression was used to model the extent to which participant characteristics accounted for the variance in the postural sway variables. Age was significantly associated with all of the postural sway variables except COP area for the eyes open condition and sample entropy in the anterior-posterior direction for the eyes closed condition. Sex, ADHD status, and previous concussion history did not significantly predict postural control scores. Conclusions: Age significantly influences scores on common postconcussion postural control assessments. Clinical Relevance: This study demonstrates that age is a critical factor that needs to be accounted for to improve the clinical appropriateness and utility of current postconcussion postural control assessments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]},
keywords = {ADOLESCENCE, AGE distribution (Demography), ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder, CORRELATION (Statistics), DATA analysis, DATA analysis -- Software, DESCRIPTIVE statistics, DISEASE complications, EQUILIBRIUM (Physiology), LONGITUDINAL method, MEDICAL history taking, MULTIPLE regression analysis, postconcussion syndrome, PROBABILITY theory, Questionnaires, SEVERITY of illness index, SEX distribution (Demography), STATISTICS},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Resch, Jacob E; Brown, Cathleen N; Baumgartner, Ted A; Macciocchi, Stephen N; Walpert, Kimberly P; Ferrara, Michael S
Influence of Mood State on the ImPACT Journal Article
In: Athletic Training & Sports Health Care, vol. 5, no. 6, pp. 272–281, 2013, ISBN: 19425864.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: *COLLEGE students, *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests, *SELF-evaluation, AFFECT (Psychology), ANALYSIS of variance, Clinical Trials, COGNITIVE testing, COMPUTER-assisted medical diagnosis, CORRELATION (Statistics), DATA analysis, DATA analysis -- Software, DESCRIPTIVE statistics, Neuropsychological Tests, RANDOMIZED controlled trials, REPEATED measures design, RESEARCH -- Evaluation, RESEARCH -- Methodology, RESEARCH methodology evaluation, SAMPLING (Statistics), STATISTICS, T-test (Statistics)
@article{Resch2013b,
title = {Influence of Mood State on the ImPACT},
author = {Resch, Jacob E and Brown, Cathleen N and Baumgartner, Ted A and Macciocchi, Stephen N and Walpert, Kimberly P and Ferrara, Michael S},
isbn = {19425864},
year = {2013},
date = {2013-01-01},
journal = {Athletic Training \& Sports Health Care},
volume = {5},
number = {6},
pages = {272--281},
abstract = {The Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing (ImPACT) is reported to possess variable reliability potentially due to a variety of factors, including mood. This study examined the influence of mood on ImPACT performance. A repeated measures design was used to assess 104 healthy, college-aged students. Participants completed the Profile of Mood States-Brief (POMS-B) and the ImPACT at days 1, 45, and 50. Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated for the POMS-B and ImPACT composite scores. At day 1, the ImPACT's Impulse Control composite score was significantly correlated to POMS-B Fatigue-Inertia mood state (-0.23},
keywords = {*COLLEGE students, *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests, *SELF-evaluation, AFFECT (Psychology), ANALYSIS of variance, Clinical Trials, COGNITIVE testing, COMPUTER-assisted medical diagnosis, CORRELATION (Statistics), DATA analysis, DATA analysis -- Software, DESCRIPTIVE statistics, Neuropsychological Tests, RANDOMIZED controlled trials, REPEATED measures design, RESEARCH -- Evaluation, RESEARCH -- Methodology, RESEARCH methodology evaluation, SAMPLING (Statistics), STATISTICS, T-test (Statistics)},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}