Sports-related concussions (SRC) may not be linked to long-term cognitive problems for non-professional players, according to a study on Wednesday.
The research, published in the Journal of Neurology,
Neurosurgery and Psychiatry (JNNP), showed that people who reported having any
SRC in their lives performed marginally better cognitively than those with no
concussion history.
In fact, participants who had sustained SRC actually
performed better cognitively in some domains than those who had never had a
concussion, suggesting that sports activity may have preventive effects.
Led by researchers from the University of New South Wales,
Australia, an international team from the US, and the UK analysed data from
over 15,000 participants aged 50 to 90. The research aimed to comprehend
cognitive decline and ageing of the brain.
"We hypothesise that there may be physical, social, and
long-term behavioural effects of sports that may make for healthier adults in
late life," said lead author Dr. Matt Lennon, from UNSW's Centre for
Healthy Brain Ageing (CHeBA).
While people with one SRC had better working memory and
reasoning capacity, participants with three or more SRCs had worse processing
speed and attention. They also had a declining trajectory of verbal reasoning
with age.
The study suggests that there could be long-term benefits
from sport that could outweigh any negative effects of concussions, which could
have important implications for policy decisions around contact sport
participation.
"While these results do not indicate the safety of any
sport in particular, they do indicate that overall sports may have greater
beneficial effects for long-term cognitive health than the damage it causes,
even in those who have experienced concussion. This finding should not be
overstated, the beneficial effects were small and in people who had two or more
sports-related concussions there was no longer any benefit to concussion.
Additionally, this study does not apply to concussions in professional
athletes, whose head injuries tend to be more frequent, debilitating and
severe," noted Lennon.
However, the study acknowledged some limitations, including
the retrospective design of the study and the lack of inclusion of professional
athletes, who face the concussion problem daily.
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