首页> 外文期刊>Annals of Biomedical Engineering: The Journal of the Biomedical Engineering Society >Comparison of Head Impact Exposure Between Concussed Football Athletes and Matched Controls: Evidence for a Possible Second Mechanism of Sport-Related Concussion
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Comparison of Head Impact Exposure Between Concussed Football Athletes and Matched Controls: Evidence for a Possible Second Mechanism of Sport-Related Concussion

机译:炮击足球运动员与匹配控制之间的头部影响曝光的比较:体育相关震荡可能第二机制的证据

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Studies of football athletes have implicated repetitive head impact exposure in the onset of cognitive and brain structural changes, even in the absence of diagnosed concussion. Those studies imply accumulating damage from successive head impacts reduces tolerance and increases risk for concussion. Support for this premise is that biomechanics of head impacts resulting in concussion are often not remarkable when compared to impacts sustained by athletes without diagnosed concussion. Accordingly, this analysis quantified repetitive head impact exposure in a cohort of 50 concussed NCAA Division I FBS college football athletes compared to controls that were matched for team and position group. The analysis quantified the number of head impacts and risk weighted exposure both on the day of injury and for the season to the date of injury. 43% of concussed athletes had the most severe head impact exposure on the day of injury compared to their matched control group and 46% of concussed athletes had the most severe head impact exposure for the season to the date of injury compared to their matched control group. When accounting for date of injury or season to date of injury, 72% of all concussed athletes had the most or second most severe head impact exposure compared to their matched control group. These trends associating cumulative head impact exposure with concussion onset were stronger for athletes that participated in a greater number of contact activities. For example, 77% of athletes that participated in ten or more days of contact activities had greater head impact exposure than their matched control group. This unique analysis provided further evidence for the role of repetitive head impact exposure as a predisposing factor for the onset of concussion. The clinical implication of these findings supports contemporary trends of limiting head impact exposure for college football athletes during practice activities in an effort to also reduce risk of concussive injury.
机译:甚至在没有诊断脑震荡的情况下,足球运动员在认知和脑结构变化发作中具有牵连重复性头部冲击暴露。这些研究意味着累积连续头部影响的损坏降低了宽容并提高了脑震荡的风险。对这个前提的支持是,与运动员的影响相比,导致脑震荡的头部影响的生物力学往往不会显着,而没有诊断脑震荡。因此,与为团队和位置集团匹配的控件相比,该分析量化了50枚令人焦平的NCAA司队的队列中的重复头部冲击暴露。该分析量化了在伤害当天和季节到伤害日期的脑子冲击和风险加权曝光的数量。 43%的令人震惊的运动员对伤害当天有严重的头部冲击暴露,与他们的匹配对照组相比,46%的令人震惊的运动员对季节的季节最严重的头部冲击暴露于与他们的匹配的对照组相比,伤害日期。当伤害日期或伤害日期的核算日期时,与其匹配的对照组相比,所有令人震惊的运动员的72%的最严重的头部冲击暴露最多。这些趋势与脑震荡发作相关的累计头部冲击暴露对参与更多联系活动的运动员更强大。例如,77%的运动员参与了十天或更多天的接触活动,比匹配对照组更大的头部冲击暴露。这种独特的分析为重复性头部冲击暴露的作用提供了进一步的证据,作为脑发出开始的概述因素。这些调查结果的临床意义支持在实践活动中限制大学橄榄球运动员的脑部冲击暴露的当代趋势,以降低震荡损伤的风险。

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