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This study aims to investigate the effect of two different physical exercise interventions on the brain, cognition and patient reported outcomes following a mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) in community-dwelling adults.
Physical exercise as an intervention for mTBI has great potential yet there is limited high-quality evidence of its effect. Additionally, while standardized exercise protocols for sport-related concussion exist, a similar program is not available to members of the general public who have suffered a mTBI. This study therefore aims to test the effect of a 3-month exercise protocol either focusing on balance or aerobic exercises. The results from the study may lead to advances in evidenced-based mTBI management and provide clinicians with an effective intervention that can improve brain and cognitive recovery after mTBI.
Full description
This is a 12-week two arm pilot randomized control trial comparing two types of exercise interventions. Both groups will complete three 30-minute remote exercise sessions weekly, via Zoom delivered by a trained interventionist and supervised by a dedicated safety officer. Participants will be randomly assigned to either aerobic or balance based exercise for the duration of the study. Participants will sign informed consent in person during a baseline visit where measures of brain (magnetic resonance imaging [MRI] and electroencephalography [EEG]), cognition, patient reported outcomes and lifestyle questionnaires are collected. Participants will repeat this session in-person at the end of the 12-week intervention. Participants will wear a wrist-worn Actigraph for 7 consecutive days at 3 time points throughout the intervention period (once each month) to collect daily physical activity levels and sleep metrics. Both interventions will be individualized and progressive in terms of intensity and difficulty. The exercise interventions sessions will be thresholded at a heart rate of 80% symptom threshold assessed at baseline using a modified cycle and fitness test.
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Inclusion criteria
Suffered from a clinically diagnosed mild traumatic brain injury (concussion) within 1 year of injury.
*All potential participants who do not have an official concussion diagnosis from a physician or were not recruited directly from Concussion and Brain Injury clinic at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) will have a phone-based consultation with a trained neurologist from BIDMC to confirm a diagnosis of mTBI, (i.e. any loss of consciousness of up to 30 mins, any loss of memory for events immediately before or after the accident for as much as 24h, any alteration in mental state at the time of the accident and a Glasgow coma score of 13 to 15) (Marshall et al., 2012) per a reliance agreement between Beth Israel Deaconess medical center and northeastern university.
Men and women of all ethnicities/races and socio-economic status.
18-55 years.
Signed Informed consent.
Physically fit enough to undergo exercise as screened using the Physical Activity Readiness Questionnaire (PAR-Q) and the cardiovascular section of the Health History & Demographics Questionnaire. An affirmative response (i.e., "yes") to any single item regarding an individual's health status is grounds for the necessary medical clearance before enrollment.
Normal or corrected-to-normal vision based on the minimal 20/20 standard in order to complete the cognitive tasks (below 20/20 vision).
Able to speak, read, and write English.
Ambulatory without pain or the assistance of walking devices.
Reliable means of transportation.
No diagnosis of a neurological disease.
MRI compatible.
No brain bleeds.
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37 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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