Soccer players who head the ball more often
may be more likely to have balance problems than players who do not head the
ball as often, according to a preliminary study released today that will be
presented at the American Academy of Neurology’s Sports Concussion Conference
in Indianapolis July 20 to 22, 2018.
“Soccer headers are repetitive subconcussive head impacts
that may be associated with problems with thinking and memory skills and
structural changes in the white matter of the brain,” said study author John
Jeka, PhD, of the University of Delaware in Newark, Del. “But the effect of
headers on balance control has not been studied.”
For the study, 20 soccer players recruited from the
community in Newark took a balance test where they walked along a foam walkway
with their eyes closed under two conditions: with galvanic vestibular
stimulation (GVS) and without GVS. For GVS, electrodes placed behind each ear
stimulate the nerves that send messages from the balance system in the inner
ear to the brain. So the stimulator can make you feel like you are moving when
you are not. In this case, it made participants feel like they were falling
sideways.
The soccer players, who had an average age of 22, also
completed questionnaires about how many times they had headed the ball during
the past year. The number of headers over a year for each participant ranged
from 16 to 2,100, with an average of 451 headers. Those numbers were calculated
by asking participants for the average number of headers during a practice and
game, the average number of practices and games per week, and the average
number of months per year that the player participated.
The study found that the players with the largest number of
headers had the largest balance responses to GVS in both foot placement and hip
adduction during the walking test, which indicated that they had vestibular
processing and balance recovery problems. Researchers found for every 500
headers, foot placement response increased about 9 millimeters and hip
adduction response increased about 0.2 degrees.
“Soccer players must have good balance to play the game
well, yet our research suggests that headers may be undermining balance, which
is key to all movement, and yet another problem now linked to headers,” said
study author Fernando V. Santos, PT, of the University of Delaware. “It is
important that additional research be done to look more closely at this
possible link with balance and to confirm our findings in larger groups of
people.”
A limitation of the study was that participants relied on
memory when reporting how many times they headed the ball.
The study was supported by the National Institutes of
Health.
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