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The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

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STOP WATCH TESTING An analysis into the use of a new testing technique to identify and treat concussions By Peter Eggleston Connor Data provided by Southern Oregon Orthopedics A Graduate Thesis from Southern Oregon University
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Page 1: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

STOP WATCH TESTINGAn analysis into the use of a new testing technique to identify and treat concussions

By Peter Eggleston ConnorData provided by

Southern Oregon OrthopedicsA Graduate Thesis from

Southern Oregon University

Page 2: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

TERMINOLOGY

Reaction TimeHealthy / Injured / Recovering

Days Since Injury (or: Recovery Time)

Symptom Score

Page 3: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

HISTORY

β€’ Prior to 2001: Concussion detection had little empirical evidence supporting it.

β€’ 2001-2012: American Academy of Neurology (AAN) creates guidelines for more globally accessing concussion risks in athletes.

β€’ 2013: An update came out pointing towards evidence that having a concussion made future concussions more likely.

Page 4: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

OBJECTIVES

β€’ Identify changes between healthy and injured reaction times

β€’ Determine a concussion recovery rate based on reaction time

β€’ Identify significant symptom scores over course of recovery

Page 5: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

DATA COLLECTION – HEALTHY AND INJURY FORM

Page 6: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

DATA COLLECTION – RECOVERING FORM

Page 7: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

DATA ORGANIZATION

Page 8: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS

Page 9: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS – RECOVERY TIME

n = 39

Mean:8.2 days

Standard Deviation:5.3 days

90th Percentile:~11 days

Page 10: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS – HEALTHY REACTION TIME

Mean:0.18 sec

Standard Deviation:0.03 sec

Page 11: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS – HEALTHY REACTION TIME IN CONCUSSED PLAYERSMean:

0.18 secStandard Deviation:

0.02 sec

Hypothesis Test All vs Concussed Healthy Reaction Timesp-value:

0.16Conclusions:

Accept Null

Page 12: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS – INJURED REACTION TIME Mean:

0.27 secStandard Deviation:

0.10 sec

Hypothesis Test Healthy vs Injured Reaction Time in Concussed Athletes p-value:

~1Conclusion:

Reject Null

Page 13: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS – REACTION TIME

DIFFERENCES

Mean:.088 sec

Standard Deviation:.098 sec

Page 14: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS – REACTION TIME RATIOS

Mean:1.49

Standard Deviation:0.52

Page 15: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

COMPAREDAYS TO REACTION TIME

Page 16: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

EXPONENTIAL MODELING:DIFFERENCE 𝑦=(π‘βˆ’h)𝑒𝛽𝑑+hy: The reaction time at t days since injury

c: The reaction time at the time of injury

h: The healthy reaction time

Ξ²: The rate of decay in the reaction time during recovery

t: The number of days since the concussion injury

Page 17: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

EXPONENTIAL MODELING

𝑦=(π‘βˆ’h)𝑒𝛽𝑑+h

Purple:Ξ² = .01

Red:Ξ² = .2

Blue:Ξ² = 1

Page 18: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

EXPONENTIAL MODELING: DIFFERENCES

𝑦 𝑖=(𝑐 π‘–βˆ’h π‘–ΒΏπ‘’βˆ’π›½ 𝑑+h𝑖

Page 19: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

EXPONENTIAL MODELING: DIFFERENCES

Where:i: Index for patient histories (1 to 39)Ε·: The predicted reaction time at t days since injury

Objective: Find the Ξ² that minimizes

βˆ‘π‘–

𝑛

βˆ‘π‘—

π‘šπ‘–

( 𝑦 π‘–βˆ’ ŷ𝑖 )2

Page 20: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

PREDICTIVE MODELUSINGDIFFERENCES

𝑦=(π‘βˆ’h )π‘’βˆ’0.5441 𝑑+h

With Ξ² selected as 0.5441 is optimized at 0.62

Peter Eggleston Connor
Split into 2 slides"t=..." Should be its own slide
Page 21: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

PREDICTIVE MODEL USING DIFFERENCES

Can be transformed into: 𝑑 𝑦 ,𝑖=ΒΏΒΏWhere π‘˜=π‘¦βˆ’h𝑖

Peter Eggleston Connor
Split into 2 slides"t=..." Should be its own slide
Page 22: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

PREDICTIVE MODEL USING DIFFERENCE BETWEEN HEALTHY AND INJURY

𝑑𝑦 ,𝑖=ΒΏΒΏOptimal k:0.0014

Mean:6.97 Days

Standard Deviation:1.52 Days

Page 23: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

EXPONENTIAL MODELING: RATIO

𝑦 𝑖

h 𝑖=(

𝑐 𝑖

hπ‘–βˆ’1)π‘’βˆ’π›½ 𝑑+1

Page 24: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

EXPONENTIAL MODELING: RATIO

Objective: Find the Ξ² that minimizes

βˆ‘π‘–

𝑛

βˆ‘π‘—

π‘šπ‘–

( 𝑦 𝑖

hπ‘–βˆ’^(𝑦 𝑖

h 𝑖))

2

Where: : Is the predicted ratio

Page 25: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

PREDICTIVE MODEL USING RATIOS

With Ξ² selected as 0.5696 is optimized at 0.43

𝑦 𝑖

h 𝑖=(

𝑐 𝑖

hπ‘–βˆ’1)π‘’βˆ’ 0.5696𝑑+1

Peter Eggleston Connor
Split into 2 slides"t=..." Should be its own slide
Page 26: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

PREDICTIVE MODEL USING RATIOS

To predict days until RTP:

Where𝑝=

𝑦 𝑖

hπ‘–βˆ’1

Peter Eggleston Connor
Split into 2 slides"t=..." Should be its own slide
Page 27: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

PREDICTIVE MODEL USING RATIOS OF HEALTHY TO INJURY

Optimal p:0.008

Mean:6.97 Days

Standard Deviation:1.50 Days

Page 28: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

SYMPTOMS Blurry Vision Concentration Dizziness Fatigue Headache Heightened Feelings Light Sensitivity Loss of Balance Memory Loss Nausea Noise Sensitivity Sleeping Habits

Page 29: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

SYMPTOMS COMPARED TO DAYS SINCE INJURYHEADACHE EXAMPLE

Page 30: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

SYMPTOM LINEAR MODELING: SINGLE DESCRIPTIVE VARIABLE

Where:y: Represents the response variable, days since

injury x: Represents the predictor variable, a symptom: Is the value of y when x is zero: The amount y changes when x increases by 1

𝑦=𝑏0+𝑏1π‘₯

Page 31: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

SYMPTOM LINEAR MODELING: MULTIPLE DESCRIPTIVE VARIABLES

Where:n: Is the number of predictor variables used in the

model: Is a predictor variable value, where are

symptoms: The amount y changes when increases by 1

𝑦=𝑏0+𝑏1π‘₯1+𝑏2 π‘₯2+...+𝑏𝑛π‘₯𝑛

Page 32: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

SYMPTOMS COMPARED TO DAYS SINCE INJURY

Page 33: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

ANALYSIS OF VARIANCE(ANOVA)

β€’ Identify Predictor Variables Independently in Multivariable Experiments

β€’ Assess Explained and Residual Variation of Response Variable

β€’ Determine Significance of Predictor Variables on Response Variable

Page 34: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

SYMPTOMS COMPARED TO DAYS SINCE INJURYANOVA

Page 35: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

SYMPTOMS COMPARED TO REACTION TIMEHEADACHE EXAMPLE

Page 36: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

SYMPTOMS COMPARED TO REACTION TIME

Page 37: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

SYMPTOMS COMPARED TO REACTION TIMEANOVA

Page 38: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

CONCLUSIONS:DETERMINING A CONCUSSION OFF OF STOP WATCH TESTINGThe reaction times taken after injury were significantly different from those of healthy times taken at the beginning of the season.

Page 39: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

CONCLUSIONS:RETURN TO PLAY

𝑑𝑦 ,𝑖=ΒΏΒΏBest Calculator:

Roughly 97.5% of cases recover in 10 Days.

Page 40: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

CONCLUSIONS:CONCUSSION SYMPTOMS

Headache, dizziness, fatigue, heightened feelings, and feeling nauseas showed significance when looking at reaction time.

Headache showed significance when looking at days since injury.

Page 41: The Effectiveness of Testing for Concussions Using the Stop Watch Method

FURTHER RESEARCH

Unconscious Incidents

Multiple Concussions

Correlation Coefficients in Linear Analysis

Larger Data Set


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