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Concussion

Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 2018
Concussions are a common injury for which patients often present first to primary care physicians. They can affect the day-to-day function of patients in school and work, as well as in sports and recreational activities. Recognizing common physical signs and symptoms after injury facilitates timely diagnosis and treatment, permitting initiation of an ...
Christina L, Master   +3 more
  +7 more sources

Concussion

2021
Factsheet on concussion symptoms, risks, treatment and recovery guidelines, and prevention.
  +6 more sources

SPORTS CONCUSSION

Continuum, 2010
Concussion is an injury to the brain occurring as the result of biomechanical forces, generally characterized by the rapid onset of a constellation of symptoms or cognitive impairment, which is typically self-limited and resolves spontaneously. Concussion as the result of playing sports is particularly common, estimated to occur up to 3.8 million times
Jeffrey S, Kutcher   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Concussion

The American Journal of Medicine, 2017
Concussion has been recognized as a clinical entity for more than 1000 years. Throughout the 20th century it was studied extensively in boxers, but it did not pique the interest of the general population because it is the accepted goal of the boxer to inflict such an injury on their opponent.
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Labyrinthine Concussion

ORL, 1971
The mechanism of the damage of the inner ear due to labyrinthine concussion was studied by analysis of the temporal bone vibrations due to experimental head injury and exposure of the skull to the sound conducted to the labyrinth by bones of the skull.
J, Dürrer, J, Polácková
openaire   +2 more sources

Acute Concussion

Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Clinics of North America
Concussions are the most common type of traumatic brain injury. They result from external force to the head that causes a neuro-metabolic cascade to unfold. This can then lead to a variety of symptoms in the domains of physical, cognition, mood, and sleep. Concussions are a clinical diagnosis but it is important to rule out acute intracranial pathology
Clausyl J, Plummer, Nicholas, Abramson
openaire   +2 more sources

The Minor Concussion

The American Journal of Nursing, 1957
ACEREBRAL concussion, whatever the cause, means that a person's brain has been shaken violently within the frame of the skull. For practical purposes, this head injury can be classified as a minor, moderate, or severe concussion. Cases classified as minor concussions are those in which there is usually no open, penetrating wound into the scalp, skull ...
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Management of concussion and post-concussion syndrome

Current Treatment Options in Neurology, 2006
Concussion and mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) are common clinical problems. However, the literature is not consistent in defining how concussion and mTBI are related. Although most patients with concussion recover within days to weeks, approximately 10% develop persistent signs and symptoms of post-concussion syndrome (PCS).
Barry, Willer, John J, Leddy
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Concussion. Acceleration limits causing concussion.

Surgical neurology, 1988
Among the many features common to all species of the animal kingdom is the transient loss of function of the nervous system as the result of a jarring blow, a phenomenon known as concussion. Understanding of concussion has been hampered by the lack of a uniform definition, with many authors including cases with gross, irreversible changes.
D, Parkinson, R M, Jell
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