Method: High school (n = 92) and collegiate (n = 73) athletes (male & female; football, basketball, volleyball, soccer, cheer) were tested twice using ImPACT™ and NeuroCom™ approximately 3-4 months between test sessions (pre/post season). Data from subjects who scored an invalid baseline performance, experienced a concussive event within 24 months prior to testing, or reported a diagnosis of ADHD or learning disability were excluded. Composite scores from measurement modules for both ImPACT™ (5 modules) and NeuroCom™ (11 modules) were compared using intraclass correlations to determine reliability. An ideal intraclass correlation measure of 0.9 or higher is expected when determining a clinical diagnostic test (Randolph, McCrea, & Barr, 2005).
Analysis/Results: ImPACT™ composite score intraclass correlations for high school participants (listed first) and college (listed second) were: Verbal memory=0.65, 0.42; visual memory=0.69, 0.65; visual motor speed=0.79, 0.76; reaction time=0.59, 0.60; and impulse control=0.63, 0.66. NeuroCom™ intraclass correlations for its 11 modules ranged from 0.08 to 0.85 for high school athletes, and 0.13 to 0.67 for college athletes. A few composite scores came close to the 0.9 or higher; however, all results indicated a low to moderate level of reliability.
Conclusions: Basing diagnostic decisions on measures with low to moderate reliability is problematic, and possibly hazardous to the health of concussed athletes. This study found widely utilized ImPACT™ and NeuroCom™ protocols to have scored low to moderate reliability among high school and college student athletes, and calls for further research to revise noted tests and to develop more accurate protocols to identify MTBI.
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