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.
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.
Thanks for sharing!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.
These are very serious symptoms, far beyond the ones mentioned above, which warrant an immediate ER visit. These symptoms can be caused by serious injury including brain bleeding and high pressure in the skull.I'll add nausea, vomiting, lethargy, fatigue, uneven pupils, dizziness to the above.
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
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.
........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.
Thanks for the info and I hope she gets better.
dizziness. confusion, staring into space, sensitivity to light, vomiting (instant proof of concussion), headaches, blackout (was a concussion)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.
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
[QUOTE="ultimate20, post: 1943AlJust curious, as to what age this is referring to? 10 yo? 15? or any sub 18 year old? Thanks.