Cardiovascular and respiratory responses during graded exercise in adolescents after sport-related concussion

(Herz-Kreislauf- und Atemwegsreaktionen während abgestufter körperlicher Belastung bei Jugendlichen nach einer sportbedingten Gehirnerschütterung)

Background: Symptom-limited exercise intolerance is a physiological sign of sport-related concussion. Possible etiologies include rest-induced aerobic deconditioning and/or impaired cardiopulmonary function. Objective: This study examined cardiovascular and respiratory function at rest and during progressive cycle ergometer exercise in adolescents within 10 days of sport-related concussion compared with non-concussed athletes. Methods: Concussed participants (n = 26, 15.4 ± 1.1 years, 54% male, 7.3 ± 1.8 days from injury) and control participants (n = 24, 15.8 ± 1.6 years, 58% male) performed the Buffalo Concussion Bike Test. Blood pressure, heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output, respiratory rate, minute ventilation, oxygen consumption, and end-tidal CO2 were collected at rest and continuously during exercise. Results: Concussed participants exercised for 16.24 ± 5.6 min, experienced a greater than 2-point (on a 0-10 scale) exacerbation of their concussion symptoms at their final minute, and reported higher perceived exertion throughout exercise versus controls. Controls exercised for 25.08 ± 7.0 min up to voluntary exhaustion without reporting any concussion-like symptoms. Concussed participants` cardiovascular and respiratory parameters did not differ at rest versus controls, but concussed participants had higher minute ventilation and their blood pressure plateaued at lower values during the first 10 min of exercise. Conclusions: No evidence of aerobic deconditioning was found within 10 days of injury. Our study found attenuated cardiopulmonary responses to progressive aerobic exercise, which may be a cause for exercise intolerance in concussed adolescent athletes. Additional research is warranted to determine if this may be related to altered autonomic nervous system regulation. Key Points: Exercise intolerance is common after sport-related concussion, but the exact reason is not known Our experimental investigation on cardiovascular and respiratory responses to exercise in adolescents after sport-related concussion found no evidence of aerobic deconditioning We found some differences in cardiopulmonary function that suggest exercise intolerance may be because of the inability of the heart to adequately increase blood pressure to meet the demands of the body during progressive aerobic exercise. Additional research is warranted to determine how altered autonomic nervous system regulation causes exercise intolerance within 10 days of concussion
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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Schlagworte:
Notationen:Biowissenschaften und Sportmedizin Nachwuchssport
Tagging:Gehirnerschütterung kardiovaskulär
Veröffentlicht in:Sports Medicine
Sprache:Englisch
Veröffentlicht: 2026
Jahrgang:56
Heft:1
Seiten:271-282
Dokumentenarten:Artikel
Level:hoch