Drill Intensity and Head Impact Exposure in Adolescent Football

Author:

Kercher Kyle A.1,Steinfeldt Jesse A.2,Macy Jonathan T.3,Seo Dong-Chul3,Kawata Keisuke14

Affiliation:

1. aDepartments of Kinesiology

2. cDepartment of Counseling and Educational Psychology, School of Education

3. bApplied Health Science, School of Public Health-Bloomington

4. dProgram in Neuroscience, College of Arts and Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES The objective of this study was to examine head-impact exposure by intensity level and position group, and to test the hypothesis that there would be an increase in cumulative head-impact exposure between drill intensities after controlling for duration in each level with air recording the lowest frequency and magnitude and live recording the highest: air < bags < control < thud < live. METHODS We conducted a prospective, multisite study in 1 season with players from 3 high school football teams (n = 74). Each player wore a sensor-installed mouthguard, which monitored head-impact frequency, peak linear acceleration (PLA), and peak rotational acceleration (PRA). Practice drills and games were categorized by level of contact. RESULTS A total of 7312 impacts were recorded with a median of 67 (interquartile range:128) impacts per player. After controlling for duration, increases in head-impact outcomes by level of contact were observed (air < bags = control < thud = live). Live drills had higher cumulative head-impact frequency (45.4 ± 53.0 hits) and magnitude (PLA: 766.3 ± 932.9 g; PRA: 48.9 ± 61.3 kilorad/s2) per player than other levels (P < .0001). In comparison, air drills had the lowest cumulative frequency (4.2 ± 6.9 hits) and magnitude (PLA: 68.0 ± 121.6 g; PRA: 6.4 ± 13.2 kilorad/s2). CONCLUSIONS These data support the levels-of-contact system as a practical approach to limiting head-impact exposure in tackle football. Our findings are clinically important, because data have begun to suggest the relationship between chronic head-impact exposure and decline in brain health. Since head-impact exposure was influenced by levels of contact, regulation of the duration of certain drill intensities (eg, thud, live) may associate with reduced head-impact exposure in high school football.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference43 articles.

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2. Lifetime prevalence of self-reported concussion among adolescents involved in competitive sports: a national U.S. study;Veliz;J Adolesc Health,2019

3. A 10-year review of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Heads Up initiatives: bringing concussion awareness to the forefront;Sarmiento;J Safety Res,2014

4. Consensus statement on concussion in sport-the 5th international conference on concussion in sport held in Berlin, October 2016;McCrory;Br J Sports Med,2017

5. Subconcussive head impact exposure and white matter tract changes over a single season of youth football;Bahrami;Radiology,2016

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