We welcome the comments made by Mandel et al. [1] on our report
published in this journal [2]. The reported tests were taken from a
larger battery that assessed learning, memory, executive function, and
verbal fluency, yet these measures failed to identify concussed athletes.
We were impressed by the ability of only three measures to identify
concussed players so accurately, but do not recommend them as a concussion
battery. The Digit Symbol and Symbol Digit tests measure overlapping but
not identical constructs. Our data suggest that 47% of their variance is
not shared. These two measures also complement each other in the
detection of impairment. [3] Multiple measures of a construct are often
used to ensure adequate reliability. It is possible that Mandel et al.
are not familiar with the Speed of Comprehension test. Reading skills are
indeed comparatively resilient to brain trauma, however the ability to
conduct parallel processing of language sense under time pressure is not.
The Speed of Comprehension test was the most sensitive of the three
measures to the acute effects of concussion, identifying more impaired
athletes. [3]
In response to particular concerns over methodology only one
physician made the rating of severity for any one player and they were not
blind to the player’s identity. Multiple raters would have been ideal.
Sensitivity (18/21 – 86% concussed athletes impaired) and specificity
(17/21 – 81% - controls not impaired) were determined using significant
decline on at least one measure. The three impaired athletes with Grade 3
concussions all had a history of multiple concussions with the most recent
in the previous year. Two of the three players without a previous history
of concussion were still impaired at 10 days. Cognitive impairment was
not related to duration of symptoms; at 2 days post-trauma five of the 21
concussed players reported ongoing symptoms, with only three of these
symptom-positive players demonstrating impaired test performance. At 10
days, only one of the 10 players with impaired test performance was still
reporting symptoms. [3] Athletes with a history of concussion within the
last 12 months (n=11) were not more likely to be cognitively impaired than
other concussed players (n=10) at 2 days (9/11 vs 9/10) or 10 days (4/11
vs 6/10).
We stated that the percentage of impaired athletes was consistent
across grades and systems as concussion grades had little bearing on
likelihood of impairment at 2 days. Without dismissing the interpretation
concerns raised, we would caution against over-interpretation of patterns
when using percentages based on very small samples.
• 92% of AAN Grade 2 concussions (n=13) were impaired, compared to
75% of Grade 1 and 3 concussions (ns=4) at 2 days post-trauma.
• At 10 days post-trauma almost double the percentage of Colorado
Grade 2 concussions were impaired compared to Grade 1 concussions, which
appears reversed for the AAN and Cantu guidelines. One more impaired
Colorado Grade 1 athlete would have de-emphasized this apparent trend.
• Mandel et al. correctly point out the discrepancies between Grade 1
and Grade 2 impairment rates at 10 days within and across systems. The
consistency we were eluding too was that players with lesser AAN and Cantu
severity ratings were more likely to be impaired at 10 days. Similarly,
Colorado Grade 1 and 2 injuries were less likely to recover than Grade 3
injuries.
The statements made were intended to represent a general trend, to
which Mandel et al. have noted the exceptions. We certainly do not
dismiss their points. However given the size of the report and the small
numbers, we were reluctant to discuss such exceptions. We appreciate the
positive comments made and look forward to advances leading to a greater
understanding of the relationship between concussion severity and
neuropsychological status.
References:
1) Mandel S, Maitz EA. Tracey JI, & Gordon JE. Severity of sports
-related concussion and neuropsychological test performance
(Correspondence). Neurology 2003;61:144.
2) Hinton-Bayre AD & Geffen G. Severity of sports-related
concussion and neuropsychological test performance. Neurology 2002;59:1068
-1070.
3) Hinton-Bayre AD, Geffen GM, Geffen LB, McFarland KA and Friis P.
Concussion in contact sport: reliable change indices of impairment and
recovery. J Clin Exp Neuropsychol. 1999;21:70-86.
EDITOR'S NOTE:
This letter is being published in reply to a letter which the authors
were sent but did not receive.