Each year, nearly 2 million children and adolescents have a sport-related concussion (SRC) in the U.S., but 57% of them do not receive appropriate clinical care following their injury. These injuries involve a wide range of symptoms including headache, dizziness, and sleep problems; and cognitive, emotional, visual, and vestibular impairment. The investigators have developed a clinical treatment model for SRC that addresses the heterogeneity of this injury using different clinical subtypes or profiles that inform precision interventions. To date, the investigators have identified cognitive, anxiety/mood, post-traumatic migraine, cervical, oculomotor, and vestibular clinical profiles. Patients with vestibular clinical profiles- involving dizziness, environmental sensitivity, and imbalance- are common (60-65% of concussions), and have worse outcomes and longer recovery following SRC. Consequently, the investigators have developed and applied precision vestibular treatments that can be matched to specific impairments and symptoms to actively treat patients with vestibular clinic profiles.
To determine using a RCT design the effectiveness of standard of care behavioral management (i.e., sleep, walking, nutrition, stress management) to standard of care behavioral management (i.e., sleep, walking, nutrition, stress management) (STANDARD OF CARE) plus vestibular exercises (i.e., balance, eye-head movements, and dynamic walking exercises) (VESTIBULAR) for reducing recovery time, symptoms, and vestibular (balance, eye-head movements) and cognitive (e.g., memory, processing speed) impairment in adolescent patients with vestibular clinical profiles following sport--related concussion (SRC).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
50
The vestibular exercise intervention group will complete behavioral management activities, and prescribed in--office/at home vestibular exercises from four groups: 1) gaze stability training (integrated eye and head movements on fixed target), 2) visual motion training (integrated eye and head movements on moving target), 3) standing balance (standing with eyes closed in different stances), and 4) dynamic gait (walking with head turns and eye movements). Participants will be prescribed to one of four levels of these exercise groups based on presentation of symptoms/impairment as indicated on VOMS. Progression through the levels will be based on symptom tolerance and successful completion of all exercises at the current level.
The standard of care consists of standardized in office/at home behavioral management including sleep, hydration, nutrition, and stress management interventions.
UMPC Sports Medicine Concussion Research Program
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Change in VOMS Scores (Vestibular Ocular Motor Screening) from Baseline to 4 Week/Visit 2
The VOMS assesses vestibular and ocular motor impairment via patient-reported symptom provocation brief assessments in 7 components: 1) smooth pursuits; 2, 3) horizontal and vertical saccades; 4) near point convergence (NPC); 5, 6) horizontal and vertical vestibular ocular reflex (VOR), and 7) visual motion sensitivity (VMS). Patients rate changes in headache, dizziness, nausea, and fogginess symptoms compared to immediate pre-assessment state on a scale of 0 (no symptoms) to 10 (severe symptoms) following each VOMS assessment to determine if each assessment provokes symptoms. Convergence is assessed by both symptom report and objective measurement of NPC distance, values are averaged across 3 trials. The VOMS takes approximately 5 min to administer.
Time frame: Measures will be conducted at enrollment (within 10 days of injury) and at 2 weeks (+ or - 5 days) and 4 weeks (+ or - 5 days) following treatment.
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