Researchers conducted a small, preliminary study to understand how the brain controls balance after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), commonly called concussion. They looked at brain activity in 5 people with recent symptomatic concussions and 5 healthy people of similar age (21-35 years old). All participants performed balance tests where they had to recover from being gently pushed.
The study measured brain signals before and during these balance challenges. They found that people with concussion had lower power in certain brain signals (called beta-bursts) in the second before a balance challenge began. During the recovery itself, their brains showed an earlier response (called the N1 response) compared to healthy people. The relationship between these two types of brain activity also appeared different after concussion.
This research is very early and exploratory. With only 5 people in each group, the findings cannot be generalized to everyone with concussion. The study shows there may be measurable differences in how the brain prepares for and reacts to balance threats after injury, but it does not prove these differences cause balance problems. More research with many more people is needed to see if these brain signals could one day help guide rehabilitation.