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Concussion Treatment

Physiotherapy For Concussion Treatment

Are you in need of concussion treatment? Physiotherapists with advanced training can provide baseline testing as well as concussion management rehabilitation after an injury. Concussions are best managed as a team and its important to involve your Family Doctor or Sports Medicine Physician. 

Concussion physiotherapy is focused on treating the systems in your body that are affected by the injury. These systems include the cervical spine, vestibular system, ocular system, and cardiovascular system.

Peak Performance is affiliated with Complete Concussion Management, and we use their advanced systems and tools to provide baseline testing and post-concussion management.

We are experience in concussion treatment and here to help you recover!

Physiotherapy

Physiotherapists see musculoskeletal injuries every day. In fact, they are experts at treating them. A whiplash injury often occurs to the neck in a concussion. This is in addition to other potential injuries that come with an impact injury. Including back or shoulder injuries.

Your concussion rehabilitation may include neck treatment, stretching, ocular exercises, vestibular exercises, cardiovascular training, and memory work.

Returning to learning, work, and sport is an important part of concussion recovery. Tools like Complete Concussion Management help guide your recovery.

Vestibular Rehabilitation

Vestibular Rehabilitation is aimed at treating dysfunction of the inner ear and eyes. This treatment includes head movement exercises, gaze stabilization exercises, balance exercises, and repositioning maneuvers.  

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Complete Concussion Management

Who is Complete Concussion Management?

Complete Concussion Management Inc. is a concussion research company that educates healthcare practitioners on evidence-based concussion therapies and management strategies so they may provide high-quality concussion programs and cutting-edge rehabilitation to athletes and concussed patients across Canada.

What is Baseline Testing?

The most critical step in managing concussions effectively begins long before an injury occurs – ideally, even before the season starts. A baseline test is conducted before a concussion happens to establish a comprehensive record of brain function.

This test measures key areas of brain activity that may be impacted by a concussion, such as memory, balance, and reaction time. If an athlete suffers a concussion, their post-injury condition can be compared to these baseline results. This comparison allows for an accurate diagnosis and ensures they have fully recovered before safely returning to their sport. Without baseline data, determining when the brain has fully healed becomes much more challenging.

While initial concussions can often be effectively treated by our highly trained practitioners, a second concussion sustained before full recovery is a significant risk. This can lead to long-term brain damage or other severe consequences. Conducting baseline testing before the season begins is a proactive way to reduce these risks and protect athletes’ health.

Pre-season baseline testing has long been a standard in professional sports, but youth and amateur athletes have often lacked access to this level of care. This gap exists partly because many healthcare practitioners are unsure how to implement such testing effectively.

Complete Concussion Management™ (CCM) addresses this challenge by offering accessible, research-backed concussion evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment. Peak Performance Physiotherapy is proud to be an official partner of CCM, bringing comprehensive pre-season and post-injury concussion care to our local athletes and communities across Canada.

Acute Concussion

In the immediate post-injury phase, there is no other treatment for concussion other than REST. A concussion or a mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), is essentially an energy deficit inside the brain, complete with ion imbalances and blood flow abnormalities. Rest has two very important features when it comes to concussion. First, it keeps the athlete from putting themselves in harms way until they have recovered sufficiently to avoid a devastating second injury. Secondly, rest allows the athlete to get a jump-start on their recovery so that all available energy is allocated to helping recover imbalanced brain cells.

The general consensus within the research and medical community is, anything that could potentially burn energy, such as mental stimulation or concentration as well as physical exercise, will in-turn delay recovery! Therefore, COMPLETE PHYSICAL and COGNITIVE REST is prescribed during the initial recovery period. This means: no school, no homework, no texting, no computer/video games, no television, no physical activity. Often times, athletes are encouraged to sit in a dark room so that they are free from light stimulation (this is not necessary, but the patient may prefer this if they are light sensitive).

The use of medications should be reserved for extreme circumstances and should only be used if directly prescribed by a physician who is familiar with concussion injuries.

The next stages of rehabilitation from a concussion injury involve a gradual return, first to cognitive activity and then a gradual increase in physical activity, with each stage separated by a period of at least 24 hours (Click here for more information). This process must be monitored by a clinician with extensive training in concussion injuries, as there are numerous signs which could delay recovery if not properly addressed. The athlete must have NO SYMPTOMS at any one of the stages in order to be progressed to the next stage. If symptoms are encountered, this is indication of not being ready for the complexity of the task, and the athlete should drop back to the previous stage for a 24-hour period before attempting the next stage again. The final stages involve monitored increases in physical exertion to assess blood flow within the brain, as well as extensive testing of neurological, mental and physical systems, to ensure that your brain has recovered and you are safe to return to activity without causing further damage.

Post-Concussion Syndrome

Post-concussion syndrome is when your concussion symptoms are persistent, beyond a 1 month period. There are numerous rehabilitation and treatment options available for patients, which are dependent on where the dysfunctions or symptoms lie. Certified Complete Concussion Management practitioners have extensive training in the treatment and rehabilitation of chronic concussion symptoms such as ongoing headaches, balance/dizziness issues, visual disturbances, reading difficulties, trouble concentrating, visual motion sensitivity, etc. For very complex cases, we have a referral network of various specialists in many regions of the country that can be accessed should your case require additional or extensive care. These referral sources meet various rehabilitation needs of post-concussion syndrome such as vestibular and motor coordination rehab for ongoing balance impairment, visual rehabilitation, cervical proprioceptive training, cognitive behavioural therapy, monitored heart-rate specific exercise programs to increase blood flow and oxygenation to the brain tissue, neurocognitive rehabilitation for problems with memory and attention, or medication if need be.

Return-to-Learn

Return-to-learn is a relatively new concept that deals with the reintegration of student athletes back into mental activity and learning following a concussion. Concussions can have a significant short-term impact on a students memory and concentration abilities, often times grades begin to suffer if this process is not dealt with appropriately. Our trained clinicians offer a stepwise reintegration back into the school environment through modifications and communication with teaching and school administrative staff. Our program offers rehabilitation programs for students that are having difficulty with certain aspects of brain function.

Return-to-Work

Return-to-learn is a relatively new concept that deals with the reintegration of student athletes back into mental activity and learning following a concussion. Concussions can have a significant short-term impact on a students memory and concentration abilities, often times grades begin to suffer if this process is not dealt with appropriately. Our trained clinicians offer a stepwise reintegration back into the school environment through modifications and communication with teaching and school administrative staff. Our program offers rehabilitation programs for students that are having difficulty with certain aspects of brain function.

Return-to-Play

Following a concussion, return-to-play is a stepwise process, which gradually introduces the athlete back into their specific sporting environment. This process gradually reintroduces varying degrees of physical and sport specific activity, assessing recovery of abnormal brain blood flow and/or vestibular function. This stepwise approach is capped off with a final physical test, designed by the Chicago Blackhawks medical staff. In addition to re-testing all pre-injury cognitive and physical measures, this test assesses an individual’s level of recovery and ability to return to full game play.

The most important step in this process is the final testing, which is compared to the results of your baseline test that is done prior to starting each season. Without knowing what your memory, concentration, balance, visual tracking speed, processing abilities, reaction time, etc. was when you were healthy, it is very difficult to truly know when you have recovered following a brain injury. Please get a proper baseline test done every year BEFORE you start your season!

To book a baseline appointment or concussion treatment give us a call or book online!

[the information contained has been reprinted, with permission, from Complete Concussion Management.]