Objective To investigate differences in Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) scores between acutely concussed collegiate student-athletes and healthy, matched group of collegiate athletes. Background Mood disturbances have been documented acutely following concussion. The presence of anxiety and/or depression may complicate and prolong concussion recovery among some athletes. Therefore, it is important to examine acute post-injury anxiety and depression to facilitate proper management decisions. Design/Methods Twenty-six student-athletes (54% female, 19.92 +/- 5.56 years of age) with a diagnosed concussion completed the HADS questionnaire within a week of injury. Twenty-six healthy student-athletes (54% female, 18.82 +/- 0.54 years of age) completed the HADS during pre-season baseline testing, individually matched by sex and sport. Independent samples t-tests were used to explore differences in HADS scores between groups. Results There was no significant difference (p = 0.50) between totalHADS scores of the concussion group (6.77 +/- 6.17) and healthy cohort (5.81 +/- 3.85). There were also no significant differences between concussion and uninjured groups on theHADS Anxiety subscale (4.38 +/- 4.24 vs. 4.50 +/- 2.83; p= 0.91) or HADS Depression subscale (2.38 +/- 2.82 vs. 1.31 +/- 1.67; p = 0.10). Conclusions HADS scores obtained among collegiate student athletes acutely following concussion did not significantly differ relative to matched healthy control participants. It is possible that one week post-injury was not enough time to observe measurable effects of anxiety or depression, as those are commonly seen in cases of prolonged recovery.
CITATION STYLE
Lanois, C., Wang, F., Berkstresser, B., Oldham, J., Meehan, W., & Howell, D. (2019). No Differences in HADS Scores Between Acutely Concussed and Healthy Collegiate Student-Athletes. Neurology, 93(14_Supplement_1). https://doi.org/10.1212/01.wnl.0000580940.91788.dc
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