Aim:To observe the effects of concussion history on cognitive-motor integration in elite-level athletes.Methods:The study included 102 National Hockey League draft prospects (n = 51 concussion history [CH]; n = 51 no history [NC]). Participants completed two computer-based visuomotor tasks, one involved ‘standard’ visuomotor mapping and one involved ‘nonstandard’ mapping in which vision and action were decoupled.Results:We observed a significant effect of group on reaction time (CH slower) and accuracy (CH worse), but a group by condition interaction only for reaction time (p < 0.05). There were no other deficits found. We discussed these findings in comparison to our previous work with non-elite athletes.Conclusion:Previously concussed elite-level athletes may have lingering neurological deficits that are not detected using standard clinical assessments.
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