CONTEXT Multiple aspects of a multidomain assessment have been validated for identifying concussion, however, researchers have yet to determine which components are related to referral for vestibular therapy. OBJECTIVE To… Click to show full abstract
CONTEXT Multiple aspects of a multidomain assessment have been validated for identifying concussion, however, researchers have yet to determine which components are related to referral for vestibular therapy. OBJECTIVE To identify which variables from a multidomain assessment were associated with receiving a referral for vestibular therapy following a concussion. DESIGN Retrospective chart review, level of evidence 3. PATIENTS OR OTHER PARTICIPANTS Participants (n=331; age: 16.9±7.2; 39.3% female) were diagnosed with a concussion per international consensus criteria by a clinical neuropsychologist after presenting to a concussion specialty clinic. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Medical chart data was extracted from the first clinical visit regarding pre-injury medical history, computerized neurocognition, Post-Concussion Symptom Scale (PCSS), Concussion Clinical Profiles Screen (CP-Screen) and Vestibular Ocular Motor Screening (VOMS) within 16.2±46.7 days of injury. Five backwards logistic regression models were built to associate the outcomes from each of the five included assessments with referral for vestibular therapy. A final logistic regression model was built using variables retained in the previous five models as potential predictors of referral for vestibular therapy. RESULTS The five models built from individual components of the multidomain assessment predicted referral for vestibular therapy (R2= 0.01-0.28) with 1 to 6 statistically significant variables. The final multivariate model (R2= 0.40) retained 9 significant variables, represented by each of the five multidomain assessments except neurocognition. Variables with the strongest association to vestibular therapy referral were motor vehicle accident mechanism of injury (odds ratio [OR]=15.45), migraine history (OR=3.25), increased headache when concentrating (OR=1.81) and horizontal vestibular ocular reflex (OR=1.63). CONCLUSIONS The present study demonstrates the utility of a multidomain assessment, and identifies outcomes associated with a referral for vestibular therapy following a concussion.
               
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