The Concussion, Exercise, and Brain Networks (ConExNet) study: a cohort study aimed at understanding the effects of sub-maximal aerobic exercise on resting state functional brain activity in pediatric concussion
Bhanu Sharma, Eric Koelink, Carol DeMatteo, Michael D. Noseworthy, Brian W. Timmons

TL;DR
This study explores how sub-maximal aerobic exercise affects brain activity and physiological responses in children with concussion compared to healthy controls.
Contribution
The study is the first to examine the effects of sub-maximal aerobic exercise on resting state brain activity in pediatric concussion.
Findings
The study will compare exercise-induced brain activity differences between children with concussion and healthy controls.
It will profile the cardiopulmonary response to exercise in children with concussion.
Findings may help optimize exercise-based concussion management strategies.
Abstract
Recent scientific evidence has challenged the traditional “rest-is-best” approach for concussion management. It is now thought that “exercise-is-medicine” for concussion, owing to dozens of studies which demonstrate that sub-maximal, graded aerobic exercise can reduce symptom burden and time to symptom resolution. However, the primary neuropathology of concussion is altered functional brain activity. To date, no studies have examined the effects of sub-maximal aerobic exercise on resting state functional brain activity in pediatric concussion. In addition, although exercise is now more widely prescribed following concussion, its cardiopulmonary response is not yet well understood in this population. Our study has two main goals. The first is to understand whether there are exercise-induced resting state functional brain activity differences in children with concussion vs. healthy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTraumatic Brain Injury Research · Cardiac Arrest and Resuscitation · Traumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular Disturbances
