Research has shown that head impacts common
to college football athletes are associated with short-term effects, but a new
study offers evidence of permanent alterations in brain structure and slower
reaction times.
by John
Tyburski
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Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
Up to now,
permanent cognitive effects of football-related concussions have been reported
only in late-career and retired players. A new study published
this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association provides
startling evidence that permanent alterations may exist in deep areas of the
brains of much younger collegiate athletes.
“Boys hear
about the long-term effect on guys when they’re retired from football, but this
shows that 20-year-olds might be having some kind of effect,” said Patrick
Bellgowan, senior author of the report, Laureate Institute for Brain Research
in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Compared
with players who played fewer years or not at all, players who played many
years or had been diagnosed with concussion from impact while playing exhibited
smaller hippocampal volumes as measured by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Players exhibited 17 percent to 26 percent smaller hippocampal volumes, and
players with history of concussion had hippocampal volumes even smaller. The
hippocampus of the brain is a deep structure that is integral for learning and
memory.
The study
involved 25 collegiate football players with concussion history, 25 players
without concussion history, and 25 men of similar age that had never played
football. In addition to MRI measurements, subjects were also administered a
computerized test to assess their cognitive abilities. The researchers observed
that reaction times were slowest in the concussion history group and fastest in
the men who never played football.
The
implications of the findings relate mainly to long-term outcomes for players
experiencing repeated head impacts. A smaller hippocampus is associated with
depression, schizophrenia, and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). Although
the study authors did not detect behavioral alterations in their study
subjects, warn that conditions like CTE may not become symptomatic for years.
Whether or
not a smaller hippocampus will cause problems for the athletes down the road is
unknown and will be the topic of future research. For now, the authors suggest
a conservative approach in which coaches and parents seek the advice of
specialists when their student athletes experience play-related headaches.
JAMA had a whole section dedicated to sports-related head injuries in youth sports at the time this article was published.
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