Abstract

Emerging evidence from neurophysiological brain vital sign studies show repeatable sensitivity to cumulative subconcussive impairments over a season of contact sports. The current study addressed the need for research comparing a low-contact control group to high-contact group. Importantly, the study also expanded the scope of neurophysiological changes related to repetitive head impacts to include female athletes in addition to male athletes. In total, 89 high school student athletes underwent 231 brain vital sign scans over a full calendar year. The results replicated prior subconcussive cognitive impairments (N400 delays) and sensory impairments (N100 amplitude reductions) in male athletes and demonstrated similar subconcussive impairments for the first time in female athletes. While there was no significant subconcussive difference between female and male athletes, female athletes show overall larger responses in general. The findings demonstrated that subconcussive impairments are detectable in a controlled experimental comparison for both female and male high school athletes. The study highlights the opportunity to monitor subconcussive changes in cognitive processing for both female and male athletes to help advance prevention, mitigation and management efforts aimed at reducing athletes’ risk of potential long-term negative health outcomes related to cumulative exposure to repetitive head impacts.

Details

Title
An objective neurophysiological study of subconcussion in female and male high school student athletes
Author
D’Arcy, Ryan C. N. 1 ; McCarthy, David 2 ; Harrison, Derek 2 ; Levenberg, Zander 2 ; Wan, Julian 2 ; Hepburn, Aidan 2 ; Kirby, Eric D. 3 ; Yardley, Tanja 4 ; Yamada-Bagg, Nikita 5 ; Fickling, Shaun D. 6 ; Munce, Thayne A. 7 ; Dodick, David W. 8 ; Ahmad, Christopher 9 ; Stein, Ken Shubin 10 

 BrainNET, Health and Technology District, Surrey, Canada; HealthTech Connex, Centre for Neurology Studies, Surrey, Canada (GRID:grid.519280.7); Simon Fraser University, Faculty of Engineering Science, Burnaby, Canada (GRID:grid.61971.38) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 7494) 
 BRAIN Team, Brentwood College School, Mill Bay, Canada (GRID:grid.61971.38) 
 BrainNET, Health and Technology District, Surrey, Canada (GRID:grid.61971.38); Simon Fraser University, Faculty of Individualized Interdisciplinary Studies, Burnaby, Canada (GRID:grid.61971.38) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 7494) 
 Surrey Neuroplasticity Clinic, HealthTech Connex, Surrey, Canada (GRID:grid.519280.7) 
 HealthTech Connex, Centre for Neurology Studies, Surrey, Canada (GRID:grid.519280.7) 
 BrainNET, Health and Technology District, Surrey, Canada (GRID:grid.519280.7); HealthTech Connex, Centre for Neurology Studies, Surrey, Canada (GRID:grid.519280.7) 
 Sanford Research, Environmental Influences on Health & Disease Group, Sioux Falls, USA (GRID:grid.430154.7) (ISNI:0000 0004 5914 2142) 
 Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, USA (GRID:grid.66875.3a) (ISNI:0000 0004 0459 167X); Atria Academy of Science and Medicine, New York City, USA (GRID:grid.66875.3a) 
 New York Presbyterian Hospital, New York City, USA (GRID:grid.413734.6) (ISNI:0000 0000 8499 1112); Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York City, USA (GRID:grid.239585.0) (ISNI:0000 0001 2285 2675) 
10  Atria Academy of Science and Medicine, New York City, USA (GRID:grid.239585.0); Hospital for Special Surgery, New York City, USA (GRID:grid.239915.5) (ISNI:0000 0001 2285 8823) 
Pages
28929
Publication year
2024
Publication date
2024
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
e-ISSN
20452322
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3131663759
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2024. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.