ON Chiropractic Fall 2014 | Page 22

FEATURE STORY / UNDERSTANDING CONCUSSIONS months, she was back to making long commutes to Ottawa on weekends. Dr. Crawford believes that chiropractors are well positioned to further investigate concussion injuries from a biomechanical perspective along with cervical spine issues such as a disruption in proprioception and cervical spineassociated headaches. Dr. Cameron Marshall D r. Cameron Marshall is a 2011 graduate from CMCC and is currently completing his Sports Sciences Residency at CMCC. He is the President and Chief Executive Officer of Complete Concussion Management Inc. (CCMI), a multidisciplinary network of sports medicine, chiropractic, physiotherapy and specialist medical and neuropsychological clinics. CCMI is designed to educate various medical and allied health practitioners on the most up-to-date evidence regarding concussion, post-concussion syndrome, and Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) pathophysiology, management, and rehabilitation. Dr. Marshall recently conducted a literature synthesis on available sport concussion research. It encompasses biomechanics, pathophysiology, diagnosis and sideline management. It also examines cervical spine involvement in sport concussions. Concussions are commonly perceived as solely head injuries, yet the cervical spine plays a critical role in the severity and prognosis of an mTBI. “The cervical spine is not only a potential source of injury that we must be aware of, but it is also implicated as a factor in concussion itself,” Dr. Marshall said.n As an extension of this, Dr. Marshall is currently finishing up a 22 FALL 2014 project in collaboration with CMCC and the renowned University of Buffalo Concussion Program on the relationship between mTBIs and whiplash. Chronic concussion patients and chronic whiplash patients were compared and contrasted based on both whiplash and concussion outcome measures. Results found no difference between patients who had suffered an mTBI through a direct head impact (concussion diagnosis) and those who did not suffer a direct head impact (whiplash diagnosis) in terms of their reported symptoms between one month and one year after injury. There were also no differences in terms of secondary signs and symptoms such as memory or concentration impairments or neck pain between the two groups. This may imply that concussion patients are also suffering concurrent whiplash injuries, the signs and symptoms of which directly overlap making diagnosis somewhat difficult for the untrained practitioner. There are a number of factors that come in to play when dealing with concussion injuries and Dr. Marshall encourages any practitioner thinking of Recommended Reading David Cassidy, Carol Cancelliere, et.al. “Systematic Review of Self-Reported b Prognosis in Adults After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: Results of the International Collaboration on Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Prognosis,” American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine 95 (2014): 132-51. Catherine Nygren-de Boussard, Lena W. Holm, Carol Cancelliere et al. “Nonsurgical D Interventions After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: A Systematic Review. Results of the International Collaboration on Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Prognosis,” American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine 95 (2014): 257-64. Maja Stulemeijer. Recovery After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (Ipskamp Drukkers, s Enschede, the Netherlands, 2009), 10-19. Vini G. Khurana, Andrew H. Kaye. “An overview of concussion in sport,” Journal of u Clinical Neuroscience 19 (2012): 1-11. Carol Cancelliere, Cesar A. Hincapie et al. “Systematic Review of Prognosis and l Return to Play After Sport Concussion: Results of the International Collaboration on Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Prognosis,” American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine 95 (2014): 210-29. Cameron Marshall. “Sports-related concussion: A narrative review of the literature,” n Journal of the Canadian Chiropractic Association 56 (2012): 299-309. Additional Resources: L. Rachid Salmi, David Cassidy, et al. “Introduction to the Findings of the International Collaboration on Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Prognosis: What is a Prognostic Study?” American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine 95 (2014): 95-100. Concussions Ontario: www.concussionsontario.org/guidelines-for-pediatric- concussion/