Normative Performance on the Balance Error Scoring System by Youth, High School, and Collegiate Athletes

Annually, more than 1 million youth athletes in the United States receive or are suspected of receiving a concussion. The Balance Error Scoring System (BESS) is the most commonly used clinical balance evaluation designed to provide a better understanding of the motor-control processes of individuals...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of athletic training 2018-07, Vol.53 (7), p.636-645
Hauptverfasser: Ozinga, Sarah J, Linder, Susan M, Koop, Mandy Miller, Dey, Tanujit, Figler, Richard, Russman, Andrew N, So, Richard, Rosenthal, Alan H, Cruickshank, Jason, Alberts, Jay L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Annually, more than 1 million youth athletes in the United States receive or are suspected of receiving a concussion. The Balance Error Scoring System (BESS) is the most commonly used clinical balance evaluation designed to provide a better understanding of the motor-control processes of individuals with concussion. Despite the widespread use of the BESS, a fundamental gap exists in applying this tool to young athletes, as normative values are lacking for this population.   To determine age- and sex-specific normative values for the BESS in youth, high school, and collegiate athletes.   Cross-sectional study.   Local youth sport organizations, high schools, and colleges.   Student-athletes (N = 6762) completed preseason baseline concussion testing as part of a comprehensive concussion-management program. Groups were youth males aged 5 to 13 years (n = 360), high school males aged 14 to 18 years (n = 3743), collegiate males aged 19 to 23 years (n = 497), youth females aged 5 to 13 years (n = 246), high school females aged 14 to 18 years (n = 1673), and collegiate females aged 19 to 23 years (n = 243).   Errors according to the BESS specifications.   Performance on the BESS was worse ( P < .01) in youth athletes than in high school and collegiate athletes. In the youth and high school cohorts, females exhibited better scores than males ( P < .05). Sex was not a factor for collegiate athletes. Data from the youth cohort were further subdivided into 4-year bins to evaluate potential motor-development differences. The error count was highest for 5- to 9-year-old males and decreased with age.   Performance on the BESS depended on sex and age, particularly in youth athletes. These sex- and age-specific normative values provide a reference to facilitate and unify clinical decision making across multiple providers caring for youth athletes with concussions.
ISSN:1062-6050
1938-162X
DOI:10.4085/1062-6050-129-17