A 2018 study presented at the
3 (RSNA) annual meeting found that young football players may experience a
disruption in brain development after a single season of playing the
sport.
The researchers’ goal was to
determine whether repetitive head impact affects normal pruning of neurons in
the brains of young players. For the study, 60 youth and high school players
with no history of concussions or developmental, neurologic, or psychiatric abnormalities
were outfitted with Head Impact Telemetry System (HITS) helmets, which are
lined with sensors that measure the magnitude, location, and direction of
impacts to the head.
Impact data from the helmets
were used to calculate the risk of concussion for each player. Based on each
player’s cumulative head impacts as determined by the helmet technology,
players were divided into two groups: high-impact players (n = 24) and
low-impact players (n = 36). Pre- and postseason resting state functional MRI
scans were performed on all players, and changes within five components of the
default mode network (DMN) were analyzed.
Postseason results showed
significant increases in power and gray matter volume in the frontal DMN in
subjects in the high-impact group. "This research demonstrates that
playing a season of contact sports may affect normal gray matter pruning in high
school and youth football players," said Gowtham Krishnan Murugesan, MS,
research assistant in the Department of Radiology at UT Southwestern Medical
Center in Dallas, Texas. "Disruption in normal pruning has been shown to
be related to weaker connections between different parts of the brain. Our
study has found a significant decrease in gray matter pruning in the frontal
DMN, which is involved in higher cognitive functions, such as the planning and
controlling of social behaviors."
The researchers hope to conduct
further study to fully understand the long-term changes in resting state brain
networks and how those changes are related to neuropsychological task
performance.
A 2018 study presented at the
3 (RSNA) annual meeting found that young football players may experience a
disruption in brain development after a single season of playing the
sport.
The researchers’ goal was to
determine whether repetitive head impact affects normal pruning of neurons in
the brains of young players. For the study, 60 youth and high school players
with no history of concussions or developmental, neurologic, or psychiatric abnormalities
were outfitted with Head Impact Telemetry System (HITS) helmets, which are
lined with sensors that measure the magnitude, location, and direction of
impacts to the head.
Impact data from the helmets
were used to calculate the risk of concussion for each player. Based on each
player’s cumulative head impacts as determined by the helmet technology,
players were divided into two groups: high-impact players (n = 24) and
low-impact players (n = 36). Pre- and postseason resting state functional MRI
scans were performed on all players, and changes within five components of the
default mode network (DMN) were analyzed.
Postseason results showed
significant increases in power and gray matter volume in the frontal DMN in
subjects in the high-impact group. "This research demonstrates that
playing a season of contact sports may affect normal gray matter pruning in high
school and youth football players," said Gowtham Krishnan Murugesan, MS,
research assistant in the Department of Radiology at UT Southwestern Medical
Center in Dallas, Texas. "Disruption in normal pruning has been shown to
be related to weaker connections between different parts of the brain. Our
study has found a significant decrease in gray matter pruning in the frontal
DMN, which is involved in higher cognitive functions, such as the planning and
controlling of social behaviors."
The researchers hope to conduct
further study to fully understand the long-term changes in resting state brain
networks and how those changes are related to neuropsychological task
performance.
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MRI scans show that repetitive blows to the head result in
brain changes among youth football players, according to a new study being
presented today at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North
America (RSNA).
Football has been the subject of much scrutiny in recent
years due to growing concerns over the long-term consequences of repetitive
head impacts. Players who show signs of concussion are typically removed from
games, but many hits to the head are subconcussive--or below the threshold of a
concussion--and, therefore, don't cause any immediate symptoms. There is rising
concern that youth football players who experience these collisions in
practices and games may be vulnerable to their effects.
"The years from age 9 to 12 are very important when it
comes to brain development," said study lead author Jeongchul Kim, Ph.D.,
from Wake Forest School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, N.C. "The functional
regions of the brain are starting to integrate with one another, and players
exposed to repetitive brain injuries, even if the amount of impact is small,
could be at risk."
Dr. Kim and colleagues studied the results of these
collisions on youth football players using a novel MRI method that looks at the
strain evident on white matter tracts--the bundles of nerve fibers that carry
information between different areas of the brain.
"The focus here was on deformations of these fiber
bundles," Dr. Kim said. "Changes from collisions might cause
elongation or contraction of these bundles."
Twenty-six male youth football players, average age 12,
underwent MRI studies before and approximately three months after the season
was over. For comparison, 22 similarly aged boys who did not participate in
contact sports had MRIs on the same schedule.
The MRI results showed that the football players developed
changes in the corpus callosum, a critically important band of nerve fibers
that connects the two halves of the brain. The primary role of the corpus
callosum is to integrate cognitive, motor and sensory functions between the two
sides of the brain.
There were signs of greater axial strain (contraction) in
some parts of the corpus callosum, and indications of radial strain (expansion)
in other parts.
"The body of the corpus callosum is a unique structure
that's somewhat like a bridge connecting the left and right hemispheres of
brain," Dr. Kim said. "When it's subjected to external forces, some
areas will contract and others will expand, just like when a bridge is twisting
in the wind."
The results suggest that repetitive subconcussive head
impacts associated with participation in youth contact sports could lead to
changes in the shape of the corpus callosum during this critical time of brain
development. Dr. Kim cautioned, however, that more evidence is needed to
confirm the findings. His group intends to continue studying the players, when
possible, to see if any additional deformation occurs.
The ultimate goal of the research, Dr. Kim said, is to
provide guidelines for safe football play. MRI may have a role in that process
by helping to determine if and when an athlete is able to return to play after
a head injury. Positron emission tomography, an imaging technique that can
detect signs of inflammation in the brain, is also potentially useful in this
regard, according to Dr. Kim.
"It's best to detect changes at the earliest possible
time," he said.
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2018-11/rson-yfc111518.php
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