Effect of Exercise Recommendation on Adolescents With Concussion
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
We examined the effect of a noncontact, subsymptom exacerbation early exercise recommendation on recovery from sports-related concussion. Retrospective analysis of adolescents, 10-17 years old, with symptomatic concussion, within 30 days of injury was performed. Time to recovery was measured between the early exercise group and a comparison group. A total of 187 patients studied-112 in the exercise group and 75 in the comparison group; 55% were male (n = 103). The exercise group had a significantly longer duration of concussion symptoms (18.5 days vs 14, = .002), although both groups recovered within the expected time to recovery for concussion. When analyzed separately, males experienced longer time to recovery from injury (19 days vs 14, = .003), than females, respectively (18 days vs 14.5, = .18). Recommendation of early exercise resulted in significantly longer recovery from concussion in male adolescents but had no significant effect in female adolescents; both groups recovered within the expected time frame.
Pertab J, Merkley T, Winiarski H, Cramond K, Cramond A J Pers Med. 2025; 15(1).
PMID: 39852225 PMC: 11766534. DOI: 10.3390/jpm15010033.
Cook N, Kissinger-Knox A, Iverson I, Stephenson K, Norman M, Hunter A J Neurotrauma. 2024; 41(19-20):2201-2218.
PMID: 38753708 PMC: 11564856. DOI: 10.1089/neu.2023.0550.