Tools for Diagnosing and Managing Sport-Related Concussion in UK Primary Care: A Scoping Review
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. Results: Evaluation of Guidelines and Tools
4. Discussion: Guiding Clinical Practice
4.1. 0–72 h Post-Injury: Optimising Acute Diagnosis
4.2. 72 h to 2 Weeks: Monitoring Recovery
4.3. 2–4 Weeks: Guiding Return-to-Play (RTP)
4.4. Managing Prolonged Symptoms
5. Barriers to Tool Adoption
6. Strengths, Limitations, and Future Directions
7. Conclusions
- No UK-validated SRCs tools exist specifically for primary care, despite DCMS guidance on concussion management within the community.
- SCAT6 and SCOAT6 are suitable for GPs but time-intensive; BIST and BCPE are quicker but not validated in the UK setting.
- Development of standardised concussion assessment tools for use in UK primary care could improve concussion diagnosis and management, with improved patient outcomes.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author (Year) | Tool/Strategy | Study Design | Population/Target | Diagnostic Criteria | Management Recommendations | Quality Assessment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Living Concussion Guidelines (2019) [15,16] | Living Concussion Guidelines (ACE tool) | Guidelines | Adults (18+), paediatrics (5–18); primary care providers | ACE symptom checklist; no minimum score | Symptom management, RTP advice | AGREE II: adults (7), paediatrics (6) |
Clarke, C., et al. (2020) [17] | HeadCheck App | Digital health application | Paediatrics (5–18); community members | Using child SCAT-5 as reference | RTP and school advice | JBI critical appraisal checklist for qualitative research: high score |
Donner, J. R., et al. (2023) [18] | Visio-vestibular examination (VVE) | Retrospective chart review | Paediatric (5–18); Emergency department, Primary care | VVE (smooth pursuit, saccades, gaze stability) | Anticipatory guidance: 67.9% brain rest and 72.8% recommended physical rest | JBI critical appraisal checklist for cohort study used to assess quality: high score but some bias as examination template used in primary care setting |
Haider et al. (2020) [19] | BCPE | Descriptive examination; refer to Leddy et al. for derivation of this examination | Adolescents (13–19); outpatient clinics | Orthostatic examination followed by 5 min. Examination of (cranial nerves, oculomotor, etc.) | None | N/A (descriptive) |
Lebrun, C. M., et al. (2013) [20] | SRC knowledge survey | Cross-sectional survey | Family physicians (US/CAN); primary care | SCAT 1 and SCAT 2. Clinical exam and balance testing | RTP guidance/education needs | Low response rate, 2 separate sites used to account for differences in training programmes. Prone to volunteer and recall bias |
Leddy et al. (2018) [21] | Derivation of BCPE | Prospective cohort study | Adolescents (13–19); outpatient clinics | Recommendations for BCPE. Carried out as part of a randomised control trial of provocative exercise testing (Buffalo Concussion Treadmill Test) | None | JB critical appraisal checklist for Cohort study used to assess quality: high score |
McPherson, J. I., et al. (2022) [22] | Tele-BCPE | Descriptive tele-examination | Adolescents (13–19); outpatient clinics | Modified BCPE screening for orthostatic intolerance and tests cranial nerves, oculomotor, vestibular, and cervical systems | None | No validity or reliability studies conducted. Derived from Buffalo Concussion Physical Examination. (See Leddy et al. and Haider et al.) |
Salmon, D. M., et al. (2022) [23] | NZRCA App | Prospective cross-sectional | High school rugby players; primary care | A subset of neurocognitive assessment components from SCAT5, ChildSCAT5, and SCAT3 for the development of NZRCA app for baseline testing | RTP guidance and community concussion management pathway | Robust sample size. Accounts for individual differences. Limitations: baseline tests were conducted, smaller sample size for females and the schools selected for the initial pilot |
Stoller, J., et al. (2014) [24] | SRC management survey | Cross-sectional survey | Emergency care, primary care, and paediatric care settings | SCAT (rarely used), clinical judgement, and diagnostic imaging | Address knowledge transfer gaps | Survey sent to 10 methodologists and 10 typical participants for content validation. An iterative process ensured question relevance and clarity. Statistics tests checked for statistically significant differences between groups |
Stuart, C., et al. (2022) [25] | SRC knowledge survey | Cross-sectional survey | GPs/urgent care (New Zealand); primary Care | SCAT (43% use) | Education and IT-integrated tools | Members of the workforce may have chosen not to participate, lacking representation in the results. Clinicians with an interest in sport or SRCs are more likely to participate, potentially introducing biases |
Taylor, A. M., et al. (2018) [26] | Concussion education | Qualitative | Paediatric primary care | Consensus-based guidelines | RTP and School | References best practice management guidelines from previous consensus statements |
A Theadom et al. (2021) [27] | BIST | Tool validity testing and survey | Ages 8+; primary and secondary care | 6 min symptom triage followed by risk stratification | Healthcare pathway guide | High concurrent validity against River Mead Questionnaire and SCAT-5 |
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Bhandari, S.; Mak, S.Y.G.; Heron, N.; Rogers, J. Tools for Diagnosing and Managing Sport-Related Concussion in UK Primary Care: A Scoping Review. Sports 2025, 13, 201. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports13070201
Bhandari S, Mak SYG, Heron N, Rogers J. Tools for Diagnosing and Managing Sport-Related Concussion in UK Primary Care: A Scoping Review. Sports. 2025; 13(7):201. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports13070201
Chicago/Turabian StyleBhandari, Sachin, Soo Yit Gustin Mak, Neil Heron, and John Rogers. 2025. "Tools for Diagnosing and Managing Sport-Related Concussion in UK Primary Care: A Scoping Review" Sports 13, no. 7: 201. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports13070201
APA StyleBhandari, S., Mak, S. Y. G., Heron, N., & Rogers, J. (2025). Tools for Diagnosing and Managing Sport-Related Concussion in UK Primary Care: A Scoping Review. Sports, 13(7), 201. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports13070201