Wednesday, September 8, 2021

 USask research discovers that concussion recovery times may be longer than previously known




What we can accept as a take home is that all concussions require a full month of recovery that entails no concussion risk activities.  A great time for road work and heavy lifting but zero sparring.

The work here also suggests that it may be possible to measure directly the degree of ongoing injury.  We truly need that.

The sports industry has been slowly coming around on all this, but in the end some sports are truly dangerous.  The best we can do is try to minimize and control the damage.  We all know about Football which retires way too many punch drunk players along with Boxing.  Both have been getting serious.

Hockey is another matter, not least because the speed is a whole different level and headlong into wall as twenty miles an hour is never going to end well.  There is scant evidence that checking rule changes help a lot as the ladies get their share of concussions.  I also suspect skill players are just that much safer as well.



 USask research discovers that concussion recovery times may be longer than previously known

SASKATOON – A University of Saskatchewan (USask) research team has identified that concussion recovery can take much longer than many people think, due to a series of biological events following a blow to the head that can take upwards of four weeks to resolve.  

The team has found a particular protein that is released from the brain and into the blood following a brain injury such as a concussion. This molecule is called cellular prion protein (PrPc), and is assumed to play a role in regulating the glucose metabolism of the brain.  

Concussion events are common worldwide among people of all ages, with more than 200,000 concussions diagnosed in Canada annually. Concussion is a type of brain injury that typically causes a temporary decrease in brain function. They are common among those who are involved in the military, play sports, or engage in physical activity with a high chance of falls or impact with objects. 

“Even a single concussion event disturbs brain glucose metabolism,” said Dr. Changiz Taghibiglou (PharmD, PhD), a co-researcher on the study. 

The goal of the project was to identify the lasting effects of concussion-related insulin resistance in the brain – how long does it take to get back to normal? 

Using positron emission tomography (PET) scanning techniques, it was found that mice with mild concussions showed a significant reduction in brain glucose uptake following the injury, which typically took seven days to return to normal. 

In more severe cases of concussion, damage was sustained for up to four or more weeks. 

“We hope that our research provides awareness for the public and especially for those who experienced a single concussion to avoid high-contact activities for at least one week or even more, until brain glucose metabolism is normalized,” said Taghibiglou. “For repeated or multiple concussions, the avoidance time would be much longer than four weeks.” 

The research, published in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences, may lead to new treatment possibilities for people with mild to severe concussions and a deeper understanding of the metabolic impacts of brain injury. Treatment possibilities could include medications or even certain diets. 

“We discovered a novel mechanism at least partly responsible for concussion-induced brain metabolism disturbance, which opens the door for potential future therapeutic interventions,” said Taghibiglou.  

This work is a successful collaboration between Taghibiglou, molecular imaging scientist Dr. Humphrey Fonge (PhD), and their team members including Saskatchewan Health Research Foundation post-doctoral fellow Dr. Sathiya Sekar (PhD). 

Other researchers involved with the study include Dr. Raja Solomon Viswas (PhD), Dr. Hajar Miranzadeh Mahabadi (PhD), and Dr. Elahe Alizadeh (PhD). 

The research was funded by the USask College of Medicine Research Award program and the Saskatchewan Health Research Foundation. 

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For more information, contact:  

Victoria Dinh 
USask Media Relations 
306-966-5487 

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