Author:
Misquitta Karen,Dadar Mahsa,Tarazi Apameh,Hussain MW,Alatwi MK,Ebraheem Ahmed,Multani Namita,Khodadadi Mozhgan,Goswami Ruma,Wennberg Richard,Tator Charles,Green Robin,Colella Brenda,Davis Karen,Mikulis David,Grinberg Mark,Sato Christine,Rogaeva Ekaterina,Collins D. Louis,Tartaglia Maria Carmela
Abstract
AbstractMultiple concussions, particularly in contact sports, have been associated with cognitive deficits, psychiatric impairment and neurodegenerative diseases like chronic traumatic encephalopathy. We used volumetric and deformation-based morphometric analyses to test the hypothesis that repeated concussions may be associated with smaller regional brain volumes, poorer cognitive performance and behavioural symptoms among former professional football players compared to healthy controls. This study included fifty-three retired Canadian Football League players, 25 age- and education-matched healthy controls, and controls from the Cambridge Centre for Aging and Neuroscience database for validation. Volumetric analyses revealed greater hippocampal atrophy than expected for age in former athletes with multiple concussions than controls and smaller left hippocampal volume was associated with poorer verbal memory performance. Deformation-based morphometric confirmed smaller bilateral hippocampal volume that were associated with poorer verbal memory performance in athletes. Repeated concussions may lead to greater regional atrophy than expected for age.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory