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Wearables in Rugby Union: A Protocol for Multimodal Digital Sports-related Concussion Assessment

Northumbria University logo

Northumbria University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Sports Injury
Concussion, Brain

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04938570
RBHS_01

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators aim to use a repeated measures observational study utilising a battery of multimodal assessment tools (symptom, cognitive, visual, motor). The investigators aim to recruit 200 rugby players (male and female) from University Rugby Union teams and local amateur rugby clubs in the North East of England. The multimodal battery assessment used in this study will compare metrics between digital methods and against traditional assessment.

Full description

Background:

Pragmatic challenges remain in the monitoring and return to play (RTP) decisions following suspected Sports Related Concussion (SRC). Reliance on traditional approaches (pen and paper) means players readiness for RTP is often based on self-reported symptom recognition as a marker for full physiological recovery. Non-digital approaches also limit opportunity for robust data analysis which may hinder understanding of the interconnected nature and relationships in deficit recovery. Digital approaches may provide more objectivity to measure and monitor impairments in SRC. Crucially, there is dearth of protocols for SRC assessment and digital devices have yet to be tested concurrently (multimodal) in SRC rugby union assessment. Here the investigators propose a multimodal protocol for digital assessment in SRC, which could be used to enhance traditional sports concussion assessment approach.

Methods:

The investigators aim to use a repeated measures observational study utilising a battery of multimodal assessment tools (symptom, cognitive, visual, motor). The investigators aim to recruit 200 rugby players (male and female) from University Rugby Union teams and local amateur rugby clubs in the North East of England. The multimodal battery assessment used in this study will compare metrics between digital methods and against traditional assessment.

Conclusion: This paper outlines a protocol for a multimodal approach for the use of digital technologies to augment traditional approaches to SRC, which may better inform RTP in rugby union. Findings may shed light on the new ways of working with digital tools in SRC. Multimodal approaches may enhance understanding of the interconnected nature of impairments and provide scalable, more objective assessment and RTP in SRC.

Enrollment

200 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 18 years;

    • Have minimal cognitive impairment, defined as a score between 0 and 8 on the Short Blessed test for cognitive function;
    • English as a first language or fluency.
    • Those that have an mTBI/Concussion during the season must have a diagnosis of mTBI from a healthcare professional (physiotherapist or medic) based upon standard criteria or identified head injury from contact sport.

Exclusion criteria

  • Medical history of a neurological illness that could grossly affect balance or coordination (such as. stroke, greater than mild TBI, lower-extremity amputation, recent lower extremity or spine orthopaedic injury requiring a profile).
  • Be a pregnant female
  • Have past history of peripheral vestibular pathology or eye movement deficits.
  • Be unable to abstain from medication/alcohol 24 hours in advance of testing

Trial design

200 participants in 1 patient group

University-level and amateur rugby players
Description:
University-level and amateur rugby players will be recruited and assessed (motor, visual and symptom assessment) over one season ( June 2021 to August 2022). Participants will be stratified according to gender (males n≈100, and females n≈100). Although the number of SRC that will be observed during the season is not known, the investigators will compare a number of head injuries/SRC to the results from cohort baseline testing. Participants that do not sustain a concussion will also have follow up testing at the end of the season.

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Dylan Powell, MSc; Sam Stuart, Phd

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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