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Journal of neurotrauma · Sep 2015
Altered Neurochemistry in Former Professional Soccer Players without a History of Concussion.
- Inga K Koerte, Alexander P Lin, Marc Muehlmann, Sai Merugumala, Huijun Liao, Tyler Starr, David Kaufmann, Michael Mayinger, Denise Steffinger, Barbara Fisch, Susanne Karch, Florian Heinen, Birgit Ertl-Wagner, Maximilian Reiser, Robert A Stern, Ross Zafonte, and Martha E Shenton.
- 1 Psychiatry Neuroimaging Laboratory, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Harvard Medical School , Boston, Massachusetts.
- J. Neurotrauma. 2015 Sep 1; 32 (17): 1287-93.
AbstractSoccer is played by more than 250 million people worldwide. Repeatedly heading the ball may place soccer players at high risk for repetitive subconcussive head impacts (RSHI). This study evaluates the long-term effects of RSHI on neurochemistry in athletes without a history of clinically diagnosed concussion, but with a high exposure to RSHI. Eleven former professional soccer players (mean age 52.0±6.8 years) and a comparison cohort of 14 age- and gender-matched, former non-contact sport athletes (mean age 46.9±7.9 years) underwent 3T magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) and neurocognitive evaluation. In the soccer players a significant increase was observed in both choline (Cho), a membrane marker, and myo-inositol (ml), a marker of glial activation, compared with control athletes. Additionally, ml and glutathione (GSH) were significantly correlated with lifetime estimate of RSHI within the soccer group. There was no significant difference in neurocognitive tests between groups. Results of this study suggest an association between RSHI in soccer players and MRS markers of neuroinflammation, suggesting that even subconcussive head impacts affect the neurochemistry of the brain and may precede neurocognitive changes. Future studies will need to determine the role of neuroinflammation in RSHI and the effect on neurocognitive function.
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