While itâ $ ™ s important to visit a medical professional in all cases,
signs of a concussion often include dizziness, sensitivity to light, mood changes, and headaches.
Not exact matches
Unfortunately, there has been during this same period, and especially in the last five to ten years, a substantial increase in the number
of reported cases
of second impact syndrome (SIS), which occurs when an athlete who sustains head trauma, i.e. a traumatic brain injury -
often a
concussion or worse injury, such as a cerebral contusion (bruised brain)- sustains a second head injury before
signs of the initial injury have cleared.
To begin with, the
signs of concussion are
often either subtle or non-existent, so they escape detection by sideline personnel.
Depending on athletes to admit to experiencing
concussion symptoms doesn't work due to chronic under - reporting.1 Likewise, studies show that coaches and athletic trainers can't be counted on to reliably identify athletes exhibiting
signs of possible
concussion for screening on the sports sidelines, especially since only 5 to 10 %
of concussions involve a loss
of consciousness and the onset
of concussions symptoms is
often delayed, especially in younger athletes.
All too
often, even hits hard enough to cause an athlete to display
signs of concussion that can be observed by sideline personnel, or which cause the athlete to experience symptoms
of concussion, go undetected, either because the
signs are too subtle to be seen or are simply missed by sideline personnel or because the athlete fails to report them (a 2010 study [7]
of Canadian junior hockey players, for example, found that, for every
concussion self - reported by the players or identified by the coaches or on - the - bench medical personnel, physician observers in the stands picked up seven)- a persistent problem that, given the «warrior» mentality and culture
of contact and collision sports, is not going to go away any time soon, if ever.
These laws
often include mandates to remove athletes from play following an actual or suspected
concussion, requirements to be cleared to return to play, and annual education
of coaches, parents, and / or athletes regarding
concussion signs or symptoms.
Some
of the
signs often seen in nursing home abuse cases that may indicate an older adult has suffered a
concussion include: