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- Kurt J Nilsson, Hilary G Flint, Yong Gao, Leslie Kendrick, Steve Cutchin, Ryoko Pentecost, and Kristi Pardue.
- St Luke's Sports Medicine, Boise, Idaho.
- Sports Health. 2019 Nov 1; 11 (6): 507-513.
BackgroundFew studies have examined white matter with diffusion tensor imaging in 8- to 12-year-old collision sport (CS) athletes.HypothesisYouth CS athletes will demonstrate change in brain fractional anisotropy (FA) after a season of CS compared with an age-matched noncollision sport (NCS) cohort, and the number, magnitude, and location of hits will correlate with changes in the brain determined via FA for CS athletes.Study DesignProspective cohort study.Level Of EvidenceLevel 3.MethodsThirty-five 8- to 12-year-old males in a youth tackle football league (CS) and 12 males from local swim teams (NCS) were recruited. Participants underwent brain magnetic resonance imaging with FA before and after the football season. Number, magnitude, and direction of head impacts were recorded for CS participants throughout the season.ResultsA total of 1905 hits were recorded in the CS group for the season, 341 (17.9%) collected during 7 games and 1564 (82.1%) observed during 31 practices. No significant interaction between group (CS and NCS) and time (pre- and postseason) was observed for FA (P > 0.05). Correlation analysis revealed a significantly positive and moderate relationship between increase of left cingulate cortex (CgC) FA from pre- to postseason and the total magnitude of lateral head impacts (r = 0.40; P = 0.03).ConclusionThere was no significant change in FA measurement of white matter integrity in a cohort of 8- to 12-year-old males after a season of youth football, nor was any difference detected in FA between youth football players and an age-matched cohort of swimmers. There was a significant correlation between total magnitude of hits sustained by youth football players and an increase in FA in the left CgC; whether this is adaptive or pathologic remains unknown.Clinical RelevanceThese data can be used within the body of knowledge to counsel patients regarding the known risks of youth tackle football regarding brain health.
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