Acute Concussion Therapy Intervention Training in Healthy and Concussed Participants (ACTIVE)
Cerebral Concussion
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Cerebral Concussion focused on measuring Concussion, Exercise
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Diagnosed as having a concussion by a physician within three days of study enrollment (concussed participants only)
- Glasgow Coma Scale >13 (concussed participants only)
- Participants must be active, which is defined as 30 or more minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity 3 or more days per week. All healthy participants must met this definition and concussed participants should have met this definition prior to injury.
- Good cardiovascular health (subject to approval from study physician)
Exclusion Criteria:
- Recreational drug use over the course of study participation
- Associated injuries (broken bones, etc.) that would limit the ability to successfully complete ACTIVE training
- For healthy participants, no history of concussion within the last year
- For concussed participants, skull fracture or brain bleed at time of the injury
- UNC Varsity athletes
Sites / Locations
- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
ACTIVE Training
Control
Healthy participants will be progressed from 60-80% of their VO2max as determined by the progressive exercise test over the course of 6 30-minute training sessions. Concussed participants will begin 30-minute training sessions at 60% of the VO2 achieved at symptom exacerbation of the exercise test. Intensity will be progressed as tolerated by the participant and training sessions will continue until the participant is asymptomatic for 24 consecutive hours (total number of sessions variable based on clinical recovery).
Healthy controls will be asked to follow their normal routine for rest and physical activity. Concussed controls will be asked to follow the guidance for rest and activity as prescribed by the physicians and athletic trainers overseeing their clinical care.