NFL and Brain Injury

By | April 18, 2016

More than 40 percent of retired National Football League (NFL) players in a recent study had signs of traumatic brain injury, according to medical researchers from Florida.

The findings were based on sensitive MRI scans – called diffusion tensor imaging – of 40 retired professional football players.

“This is one of the largest studies to date of living retired NFL players and one of the first to demonstrate significant objective evidence for traumatic brain injury in these former players,” said study author Francis X. Conidi, MD, DO, of the Florida Center for Headache and Sports Neurology and Florida State University College of Medicine in Tallahassee.

Conidi said the rate of traumatic brain injury was “significantly higher” in the players than that found in the general population.

Concussions and repetitive head injuries are not just experienced by pro players.

For the study, researchers conducted thinking and memory tests in 40 retired NFL players, along with the brain scans. The players were an average age of 36, ranging from 27 to 56. A majority of the players had been out of the NFL for less than five years. They played an average of seven years in the NFL, with a range of two to 17 years. They reported an average of 8.1 concussions. Twelve players, or 31 percent, said they had several sub-concussive hits, or hits considered below the threshold of a concussion.

The MRIs measured the amount of damage to the brain’s white matter, which connects different brain regions, based on the movement of water molecules in the brain tissue. Seventeen players, or 43 percent, had levels of movement 2.5 standard deviations below those of healthy people of the same age, which is considered evidence of traumatic brain injury with a less than one percent error rate.

Twelve of the former athletes, or 30 percent, showed evidence on traditional MRI of injury to the brain due to disruption of the nerve axons, those parts of nerve cells that allow brain cells to transmit messages to each other. On the tests of thinking skills, about 50 percent had significant problems on executive function, 45 percent on learning or memory, 42 percent on attention and concentration, and 24 percent on spatial and perceptual function.

The more years a player spent in the NFL, the more likely he was to have the signs of traumatic brain injury on the advanced MRI.

Concussions and repetitive head injuries are not just experienced by pro players. More than three-quarters of the football players in the U.S. are under the age of 14 and they are just as – and perhaps more – susceptible to head injuries because their brains are still developing, researchers say. But there’s no question career players are more at risk. Researchers found the longer the career span, the higher the risk of traumatic brain injury for pro players.

Topics Florida

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