Experience with Multiple Concussions?

My kid was kicked in the head during a game this past weekend while playing keeper. She seems fine. What symptoms to keep an eye out for? Did make me think about head gear for the first time.

I'll add nausea, vomiting, lethargy, fatigue, uneven pupils, dizziness to the above. My dd sustained a concussion last October and was out 5 weeks. She was kicked in the head during a game, said she threw up in her mouth a little on impact (sorry, TMI), coach sat her immediately for the rest of the game. She seemed fine right after the game and then started showing symptoms about 2 hours later. Primary care docs unfortunately were not super helpful in our case--I would seek out a pediatric sports med doc with concussion specialty if you can. The worse thing that can happen is for a child to sustain a concussion and then get another concussion on top of an unhealed one. Allowing the first to heal is an absolute must so the more time off the field the better.
 
My kid was kicked in the head during a game this past weekend while playing keeper. She seems fine. What symptoms to keep an eye out for? Did make me think about head gear for the first time.

Did she have any feelings of nausea right after or the next day? If any symptoms show, she should see a doctor.
 
My dd had two concussions within a year of each other but the second one was minor. I did go out and buy her head gear. She is a center defender and has to use her head quite a bit. She has commented multiple times that it feels much better heading balls and she is so used to it now that she doesn't like to play without it. Whether the studies say it works or it doesn't I know my dd feels better with it and she has had some tough falls and it seemed to help. As for how they both happened, they were due to being knocked backwards and falling on her head. One was playing futsal on a basketball court and I don't think anything would have stopped that one but I do think the second one could have been avoided with her current head gear.
 
My dd had two concussions within a year of each other but the second one was minor. I did go out and buy her head gear. She is a center defender and has to use her head quite a bit. She has commented multiple times that it feels much better heading balls and she is so used to it now that she doesn't like to play without it. Whether the studies say it works or it doesn't I know my dd feels better with it and she has had some tough falls and it seemed to help. As for how they both happened, they were due to being knocked backwards and falling on her head. One was playing futsal on a basketball court and I don't think anything would have stopped that one but I do think the second one could have been avoided with her current head gear.
Thanks for sharing!
 
Maybe I am overstating the obvious, but if you suspect your kid has gotten a concussion during a tournament early on, I would be really cautious about allowing your kid to play the rest of the weekend, especially since symptoms sometimes don't manifest until a few hours later. Heard a horror story around the time my dd was recovering of a girl who played two consecutive games of a tourney, got a knock to the head in both games. Never completely recovered and went from being an A student to having cognitive problems long term. No game or trophy is worth your kid's brain.

Wishing your dd a speedy recovery.
 
Maybe I am overstating the obvious, but if you suspect your kid has gotten a concussion during a tournament early on, I would be really cautious about allowing your kid to play the rest of the weekend, especially since symptoms sometimes don't manifest until a few hours later. Heard a horror story around the time my dd was recovering of a girl who played two consecutive games of a tourney, got a knock to the head in both games. Never completely recovered and went from being an A student to having cognitive problems long term. No game or trophy is worth your kid's brain.

Wishing your dd a speedy recovery.

I had heard that 3 concussions at a young age and you should consider quitting. This article points to that too. It's a bit scary:
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/brain-trauma/201410/when-quit-contact-sports-due-concussion
 
I had heard that 3 concussions at a young age and you should consider quitting. This article points to that too. It's a bit scary:
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/brain-trauma/201410/when-quit-contact-sports-due-concussion

As a doctor explained it to me last year, it depends on the severity of those "concussions". After a third bad one where you've had dizzy spells, headache lasting for several days or longer, nausea then after three I'm calling time on my DD's soccer career. However, if it's more the "she took a hit, seems fine but let's call it a concussion and sit her for two weeks just to be sure" then I'm not sure I'd take the same approach re the three and out for good. To be clear, I'm a big fan of safe rather than sorry and a coach should always take a kid out after a head hit and in most cases sit them for the rest of the game of not for a full week or more under medical guidance to be absolutely sure.
 
I had heard that 3 concussions at a young age and you should consider quitting. This article points to that too. It's a bit scary:
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/brain-trauma/201410/when-quit-contact-sports-due-concussion

According to the article,
  • “Athletes who have sustained three or more concussions are more likely to have long-term cognitive impairment and emotional struggles.”
You’d think it’d be wise to quit after two...

#mytwocents #threeistoolate
 
Both were the result of the soccer ball hitting her in the face/side of the face/side of the head at a speed where she could not get her head out of the way. She is a defender and the impacts all happened in the defensive third - crosses that hit her/shots towards the goal.

Both were the results of multiple impacts over the course of a long weekend, or two week period. No one instance knocked her out, or made her dizzy. The symptoms presented themselves 1 to 3 days later when she played in another game. In other words, we made sure she was OK (at least we thought we did), she said she was fine, and then symptoms began when she played afterwards.

We have not seen a neurologist. The sports medicine doctor that specializes in concussions that we are seeing says that she is healing within the acceptable amount of time.

Thought I’d follow up and see how she’s doing now, did she suffer anymore? Also when it happened, did this happen when she was trying to head the ball or was she just caught off gaurd?

Trying to help guide my DD when it comes to awareness and protecting herself...
 
........To be clear, I'm a big fan of safe rather than sorry and a coach should always take a kid out after a head hit and in most cases sit them for the rest of the game of not for a full week or more under medical guidance to be absolutely sure.

The problem that I run into as a referee is the coach that does not want to take the player out of the game and the parent backs up the coach or the parent insists that the player is fine and should be allowed back in the game. Cal South and the gaming leagues are very specific on what should happen if the referee suspects a head injury, but coaches and parents do not always want to follow the Cal South guidance. I, as a referee, have to take a firm stance on not letting that player back in the game unless cleared by an onsite trainer (during tournaments). If there is no trainer to clear the player than I am not letting them back in the game and sending a report to the tournament, league and Cal South to report the head injury. It is the referees that do not take a firm stance or ignore the symptoms and the coaches that insist the player is fine to continue playing that are the ones risking the players health.
 
Or the coach that coaches his team to take out players on the other team and the ref or gaming circuit does nothing, causing players to be at higher risk of concussion.
 
Thanks for the info and I hope she gets better.

All good information. The headgear, headbands won't fully stop a concussion but could lessen the degree of the head trauma. If a player had a previous concussion, rests for a month (seems to be the average time - going through concussion protocol) with now no symptoms - and then takes an elbow to the head, collision etc. The band can help to some degree, dampen the blow. Really have not heard a straight answer (from doctors/trainers) when the symptoms clear - how soon "could" a player resume heading a ball? from goalie punts? Never... Corner kicks? Never? Balls that bounce on the ground first? Mid range kicks? 6 months, never? Obviously technique is very important too - but wow still seems to be taking a chance. In youth soccer, players need to build/strengthen their neck muscles to counter the blow. In doing months of research and actually speaking to headband ownership in depth, conversing with doctors - many feel in the next few years head bands could be a requirement like shin guards. Also only 25% of soccer concussions are from heading the ball and goalies have the highest rate in receiving a concussion. Once a player receives a concussion, main thing is to rest - no screen time (TV, phones) for at least a week. First week is critical for recovery. Off school and gradually returning to society, school then sports. In actively competing again - no headaches, symptoms after each 6 progressive steps - walking, running, drills, practice no contact, practice, then game. Still the jury is still out on a lot of this. You'll be surprised how each doctor handles a concussion these days. Each has a different approach. Still have not received a clear answer on heading the ball again... If indeed is it worth the risk after sustaining that first concussion.
 
American football experience with multiples; ring your bell... ah just shake it off and get back in there after a few plays.

CTE, brain diseases can start sooner if tackle football is played before age 12

https://sports.yahoo.com/report-cte...-tackle-football-played-age-12-215912339.html

"“Youth exposure to repetitive head impacts in tackle football may reduce one’s resiliency to brain diseases later in life, including, but not limited to, CTE,” Ann McKee, the director of Boston University’s CTE Center and an author of the study, told the Washington Post. “It makes common sense that children, whose brains are rapidly developing, should not be hitting their heads hundreds of times per season.”

This just came out on this week, based on my on experiences & research I did some years ago we are glad our son stuck with he NFL flag league until he reached high school age. He was recruited big time to play HS football but hasn't played yet, was taking about in his senior year after college commitments.

I don't remember the players name but when my son first started academy he meet a 1st team player who was retired due to concussion syndrome. Kind of scary I recall but my son kind of brushed it off saying maybe he was just too old but that changed for him when one of his friends & teammate actually had to take almost six months off soccer when he was a freshman due to concussion syndrome; he was irritable, getting ringing in the ears, headaches, had trouble with concentration & grades. He liked to head the ball like but son and got hit in the ear & head defending the ball one two many times and he was basically out and hasn't yet returned to the form he once had, but he did recover but sticks to non contact sports for the most part.

The new rules about heading for the younger's might be controversial, but based on new research and knowing what I know now I think I would have been better for him not to start heading the ball when he was like 6, by the time he reached HS he had already been heading for like 8+ years and that's a lot of hits over the years of practices, games, tournaments, etc. My 2 cents.
 
My son had a bad concussion and have had several kids on his team have multiple concussions.

Protocol my son's pediatrician "must" follow:

1st Concussion - Out for 2 weeks from play, no reading, straining, low light atmospheres. If headaches occur, even at school, go home and rest.

2nd Concussion - Out for at minimum 3 months. No sports, No running around. Same protocol with school work. Brain scans. Doctor visit every 10 days to start.

3rd Concussion - Kid is done with sports. Period. End of Story.

I argued about "when i was a kid", but said not the same. I had to agree that sports wasnt worth kid's long term health, quality of life and risking early death.

My wife suffered a bad concussion at work with a blow to the head. Migraines all the time. Only relief now is via A.R.T. Could probably get rid of them with aggressive treatment, but only takes time and money. Another factor some dont take into a count. It can be a lifetime problem which will require a lot of financial resources and time to manage
 
My kid was kicked in the head during a game this past weekend while playing keeper. She seems fine. What symptoms to keep an eye out for? Did make me think about head gear for the first time.
dizziness. confusion, staring into space, sensitivity to light, vomiting (instant proof of concussion), headaches, blackout (was a concussion)
 
My son had a bad concussion and have had several kids on his team have multiple concussions.

Protocol my son's pediatrician "must" follow:

1st Concussion - Out for 2 weeks from play, no reading, straining, low light atmospheres. If headaches occur, even at school, go home and rest.

2nd Concussion - Out for at minimum 3 months. No sports, No running around. Same protocol with school work. Brain scans. Doctor visit every 10 days to start.

3rd Concussion - Kid is done with sports. Period. End of Story.

I argued about "when i was a kid", but said not the same. I had to agree that sports wasnt worth kid's long term health, quality of life and risking early death.

My wife suffered a bad concussion at work with a blow to the head. Migraines all the time. Only relief now is via A.R.T. Could probably get rid of them with aggressive treatment, but only takes time and money. Another factor some dont take into a count. It can be a lifetime problem which will require a lot of financial resources and time to manage


Just curious, as to what age this is referring to? 10 yo? 15? or any sub 18 year old? Thanks.
 
Just curious, as to what age this is referring to? 10 yo? 15? or any sub 18 year old? Thanks.
[QUOTE="ultimate20, post: 1943Al

My doctor is hyper conservative. From the convo I reasonably concluded he meant anyone under 18. Most breakup guidelines using ages 5-12 & 13-18. Everyone develops differently but I guess they have to set the mark to make guidelines. Most doctors/literature online isnt as strict. For example, some doctors/guidelines say only to monitor kids 24-48 hours before making a decision for them to return to non-contact play - which is a bit quick in my opinion given the concussions I have seen. Even light activity bothered the kids I have seen - obviously you just have to sit them down. Studies show you even have to limit cognitive activity as much as possible or the concussion symptoms will be prolonged. The kids I have seen out "cold" for more than a minute are the kids who have symptoms for a long period of time - even months. No real time frame for recovery, look at Justin Morneau's case, and he was a grown adult.

Here is something I read that makes me follow my doctors advice and tell other parents who think "he/she looks fine, suck it up": one study documented 9% of people who suffered a 2nd concussion while recovering from a concussion DIED. I wouldnt take that chance with ANY child.
 
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