Summary
Introduction
The most common head injury in sports is concussion, and repeated concussions occurring within a short period occasionally can be fatal. Acute subdural hematoma is the most common severe head injury and can be associated with severe neurologic disability and death in sports. We investigated severe brain damage resulting from repetitive head injury in sports, and evaluated the pathophysiology of sports-related repetitive injury.
Methods
We reviewed the literature containing detailed descriptions of repetitive severe sports-related head injury. In total, 18 cases were analyzed with regard to age, gender, type of sports, symptoms before second injury, and pathology of brain CT scans.
Results
The majority of cases involved young males aged 16 to 23 years old, who sustained a second head injury before symptoms from the first head injury had resolved. Ten of 15 cases did not suffer loss of consciousness at insult. Eight cases were confirmed on brain CT scans after the second injury, and all 8 cases revealed brain swelling associated with a thin subdural hematoma.
Conclusions
Second impact syndrome is thought to occur because of loss of autoregulation of cerebral blood flow, leading to vascular engorgement, increased intracranial pressure, and eventual herniation. Our investigation suggests that the existence of subdural hematoma is a major cause of brain swelling following sports-related, repetitive head injury.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Cantu RC (1998) Second-impact syndrome. Clin Sports Med 17: 37–44
Cantu RC, Voy R (1995) Second impact syndrome: a risk in any contact sport. Physician Sportsmed 23: 27–34
Collins MW, Grindel SH, Lovell MR, Dede DE, Moser DJ, Phalin BR, Nogle S, Wasik M, Cordry D, Daugherty KM, Sears SF, Nicolette G, Indelicato P, McKeag DB (1999) Relationship between concussion and neurophysical performance in college football players. JAMA 282: 964–970
Collins MW, Lovell MR, Mckeag DB (1999) Current issues in managing sports-related concussion. JAMA 282: 2283–2285
Cruikshank JK, Higgens CS, Gray JR (1980) Two cases of acute intracranial haemorrhage in young amateur boxers. Lancet 1: 626–627
Fekete JF (1968) Severe brain injury and death following minor hockey accidents: the effectiveness of the “safety helmets” of amateur hockey players. Can Med Assoc J 99: 1234–1239
Gerberich SG, Priest JD, Boen JR, Straub CP, Maxwell RE (1983) Concussion incidences and severity in secondary school varsity football players. Am J Public Health 73: 1370–1375
Kawamata T, Katayama Y (2002) Concussion in sports [in Japanese]. Rinsho Sports Igaku 19: 637–643
Kelly JP, Rosenberg JH (1997) Diagnosis and management of concussion in sports. Neurology 48: 575–580
Kelly JP, Nichols JS, Filley CM, Lillehei KO, Rubinstein D, Kleinschmidt-DeMasters BK (1991) Concussion in sports. Guidelines for the prevention of catastrophic outcome. JAMA 266: 2867–2869
Logan SM, Bell GW, Leonard JC (2001) Acute subdural hematoma in a high school football player after 2 unreported episodes of head trauma: a case report. J Athl Train 36: 433–436
McCrory P (2001) Does second impact syndrome exist? Clin J Sport Med 11: 144–149
McCrory PR, Berkovic SF (1998) Second impact syndrome. Neurology 50: 677–683
Miele VJ, Carson L, Carr A, Bailes JE (2004) Acute on chronic subdural hematoma in a female boxer: a case report. Med Sci Sports Exerc 36: 1852–1855
Report of the Sports Medicine Committee (1990) Guidelines for the management of concussion in sports. Colorado Medical Society, Denver
Saunders RL, Harbaugh RE (1984) The second impact in catastrophic contact-sports head trauma. JAMA 252: 538–539
Shell D, Carico GA, Patton RM (1993) Can subdural result from repeated minor head injury? Physician Sportsmed 21: 74–84
Sturmi JE, Smith C, Lombardo JA (1998) Mild brain trauma in sports. Diagnosis and treatment guidelines. Sports Med 25: 351–358
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2006 Springer-Verlag
About this paper
Cite this paper
Mori, T., Katayama, Y., Kawamata, T. (2006). Acute hemispheric swelling associated with thin subdural hematomas: pathophysiology of repetitive head injury in sports. In: Hoff, J.T., Keep, R.F., Xi, G., Hua, Y. (eds) Brain Edema XIII. Acta Neurochirurgica Supplementum, vol 96. Springer, Vienna. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-211-30714-1_10
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/3-211-30714-1_10
Publisher Name: Springer, Vienna
Print ISBN: 978-3-211-30712-0
Online ISBN: 978-3-211-30714-4
eBook Packages: MedicineMedicine (R0)