STILL NO REASON TO DROP THEM ON THEIR HEADS
Children’s IQs not diminished by concussion
UCalgary led study published in Pediatrics can reduce parental fears
Peer-Reviewed PublicationThe angst parents feel when their children sustain injuries is surely one of the universal conditions of parenthood. That anxiety is heightened greatly when those injuries involve concussions. But a new study led out of the University of Calgary, published today in the medical journal Pediatrics, may set worried parental minds slightly at ease.
The findings – taken from emergency room visits in children’s hospitals in Canada and the United States – show that IQ and intelligence is not affected in a clinically meaningful way by pediatric concussions.
The study compares 566 children diagnosed with concussion to 300 with orthopedic injuries. The children range in age from eight to 16 and they were recruited from two cohort studies. The Canadian cohort encompasses data collected from five children’s hospital emergency rooms, including Alberta Children’s Hospital in Calgary, along with those in Vancouver, Edmonton, Ottawa, and Montreal (CHU Sainte-Justine). In the Canadian hospitals, patients completed IQ tests three months postinjury.
The U.S. cohort was conducted at two children’s hospitals in Ohio, wherein patients completed IQ tests three to 18 days, postinjury.
“Obviously there’s been a lot of concern about the effects of concussion on children, and one of the biggest questions has been whether or not it affects a child’s overall intellectual functioning,” says Dr. Keith Yeates, PhD, a professor in UCalgary’s Department of Psychology and senior author of the Pediatrics paper. Yeates is a renowned expert on the outcomes of childhood brain disorders, including concussion and traumatic brain injuries.
“The data on this has been mixed and opinions have varied within the medical community,” says Yeates. “It’s hard to collect big enough samples to confirm a negative finding. The absence of a difference in IQ after concussion is harder to prove than the presence of a difference.”
Combining the Canadian and U.S. cohorts gave the Pediatrics study an abundant sample and it allowed Yeates and his co-authors – from universities in Edmonton, Montreal, Vancouver, Ottawa, Atlanta, Utah, and Ohio, along with Calgary’s Mount Royal University – to test patients with a wide range of demographics and clinical characteristics.
“We looked at socioeconomic status, patient sex, severity of injuries, concussion history, and whether there was a loss of consciousness at the time of injury,” says Yeates. “None of these factors made a difference. Across the board, concussion was not associated with lower IQ.”
The children with concussion were compared to children with orthopedic injuries other than concussion to control for other factors that that might affect IQ, such as demographic background and the experience of trauma and pain. This allowed the researchers to determine whether the children’s IQs were different than what would be expected minus the concussion.
The findings of the study are important to share with parents, says Dr. Ashley Ware, PhD, a professor at Georgia State University and lead author of the paper. While the Pediatrics research was underway, Ware was a Killam Postdoctoral Fellow at UCalgary, where Yeates was her supervisor.
“Understandably, there’s been a lot of fear among parents when dealing with their children’s concussions,” Ware says. “These new findings provide really good news, and we need to get the message to parents.”
Dr. Stephen Freedman, PhD, co-author of the paper, a professor of pediatrics and emergency medicine at the Cumming School of Medicine, agrees. “It’s something doctors can tell children who have sustained a concussion, and their parents, to help reduce their fears and concerns,” says Freedman. “It is certainly reassuring to know that concussions do not lead to alterations in IQ or intelligence.”
Another strength of the Pediatrics research is that incorporates the two cohort studies, one testing patients within days of their concussions and the other after three months.
“That makes our claim even stronger,” says Ware. “We can demonstrate that even in those first days and weeks after concussion, when children do show symptoms such as a pain and slow processing speed, there’s no hit to their IQs. Then it’s the same story three months out, when most children have recovered from their concussion symptoms. Thanks to this study we can say that, consistently, we would not expect IQ to be diminished from when children are symptomatic to when they’ve recovered.”
She adds: “It’s a nice ‘rest easy’ message for the parents.”
JOURNAL
PEDIATRICS
METHOD OF RESEARCH
Randomized controlled/clinical trial
SUBJECT OF RESEARCH
People
ARTICLE TITLE
IQ After Pediatric Concussion
ARTICLE PUBLICATION DATE
17-Jul-2023
COI STATEMENT
Dr Yeates receives an editorial stipend from the American Psychological Association. He is a principal investigator on grants from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and a co-investigator on grants from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the National Institutes of Health, Brain Canada Foundation, and the National Football League Scientific Advisory Board. He receives book royalties from Guilford Press and Cambridge University Press. He has received travel support and honorarium for presentations to multiple organizations. He has served or serves on PEDIATRICS Volume 152, number 2, August 2023 9 the following committees/boards for which he receives honorarium: Independent Data Monitoring Committee Care for Postconcussive Symptoms Effectiveness Trial, National Institute for Child Health and Human Development; Observational Study Monitoring Board, Approaches and Decisions in Acute Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury Trial, National Institute of Neurologic Disorders and Stroke; National Research Advisory Council, National Pediatric Rehabilitation Resource Center, Center for Pediatric Rehabilitation: Growing Research, Education, and Sharing Science, Virginia Tech University. Dr Brooks declares the following potential conflicts of interest: Royalties for the sales of the Pediatric Forensic Neuropsychology textbook (2012, Oxford University Press); royalties for the sales of 3 pediatric neuropsychological tests (Child and Adolescent Memory Profile [Sherman and Brooks, 2015, PAR Inc.], Memory Validity Profile [Sherman and Brooks, 2015, PAR Inc.], and Multidimensional Everyday Memory Ratings for Youth [Sherman and Brooks, 2017, PAR Inc.]); grants for concussion/mild traumatic brain injury research; reimbursement for talks on concussion/ mild traumatic brain injury; consulting neuropsychologist to the Calgary Flames for the National Hockey League Concussion Program; and private practice work with people with concussion/ mild traumatic brain injury. Dr Zemek holds competitively funded research grants from Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Ontario Neurotrauma Foundation, Physician Services Incorporated Foundation, Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Foundation, Ontario Brain Institute, and Ontario SPOR Support Unit, and the National Football League Scientific Advisory Board. He is supported by a clinical research chair in Pediatric Concussion from University of Ottawa. He is the co-founder, scientific director, and a minority shareholder in 360 Concussion Care, an interdisciplinary concussion clinic. The other authors have indicated they have no conflicts of interest to relevant to this article to disclose.
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