Journal of neurotrauma
-
Journal of neurotrauma · May 2021
The Effect of Coach Feedback and Awareness of Head Impact Exposure on Practice Structure in Youth Football.
With the concern of concussion risk and repetitive head impacts in youth football, organizations have adopted rules that limit contact during practice. However, rule changes are not ubiquitous among organizations and are challenging to monitor and enforce. Ultimately, football practice activities are determined by coaches, but it is unknown whether providing objective data to coaches relating activities to their athletes' head impact exposure (HIE) would alter practice structure or help reduce HIE. ⋯ Among all teams, 95th percentile linear and rotational accelerations were highest during mid-season. Among intervention teams, more time was spent on scrimmage and skill development from pre-season to late-season, with less time spent on tackling. This study suggests that receiving objective data informing HIE in practice may contribute to changes in practice structure and help inform intervention efforts to improve head impact safety in football.
-
Journal of neurotrauma · May 2021
Brain perfusion bridges virtual-reality spatial behavior to TPH2 genotype for head acceleration events.
Neuroimaging demonstrates that athletes of collision sports can suffer significant changes to their brain in the absence of concussion, attributable to head acceleration event (HAE) exposure. In a sample of 24 male Division I collegiate football players, we examine the relationships between tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (TPH2), a gene involved in neurovascular function, regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) measured by arterial spin labeling, and virtual reality (VR) motor performance, both pre-season and across a single football season. For the pre-season, TPH2 T-carriers showed lower rCBF in two left hemisphere foci (fusiform gyrus/thalamus/hippocampus and cerebellum) in association with higher (better performance) VR Reaction Time, a dynamic measure of sensory-motor reactivity and efficiency of visual-spatial processing. ⋯ These findings show that TPH2 T-carriers have an abnormal relationship between rCBF and the efficiency of visual-spatial processing that is exacerbated after a season of high-impact sports in the absence of diagnosable concussion. Such gene-environment interactions associated with behavioral changes after exposure to repetitive HAEs have been unrecognized with current clinical analytical tools and warrant further investigation. Our results demonstrate the importance of considering neurovascular factors along with traumatic axonal injury to study long-term effects of repetitive HAEs.
-
Journal of neurotrauma · May 2021
Association of prior concussion with hippocampal volume and symptoms in collegiate-aged athletes.
There is concern that previous concussion and contact-sport exposure may have negative effects on brain structure and function. Accurately quantifying previous concussion is complicated by the fact that multiple definitions exist, with recent definitions allowing for diagnosis based on the presence of symptoms alone (Concussion in Sport Group criteria; CISG) rather than the presence of acute injury characteristics such as alterations in mental status (American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine criteria; ACRM). The goals of the current work were to determine the effects of previous concussion and contact-sport exposure on gray matter structure and clinical measures in healthy, young-adult athletes and determine the extent to which these associations are influenced by diagnostic criteria used to retrospectively quantify concussions. ⋯ There was a significant association of concussion-related and psychological symptoms with previous concussions based on ACRM (ps < 0.05), but not CISG, criteria. Hippocampal volume was inversely associated with the number of previous concussions for both criteria (ps < 0.05). Findings provide evidence that previous concussions are associated with smaller hippocampal volumes and greater subjective clinical symptoms in otherwise healthy athletes and highlight the importance of diagnostic criteria used to quantify previous concussion.
-
Journal of neurotrauma · May 2021
Worsening of dizziness impairment is associated with BMX level in patients after mild traumatic brain injury.
Over 2 million people suffer from mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) each year. Predicting symptoms of mTBI and the characterization of those symptoms has been challenging. Biomarkers that correlate clinical symptoms to disease outcome are desired to improve understanding of the disease and optimize patient care. ⋯ Areas under the curve for prediction of change in DHI postinjury were 0.76 for total score, 0.69 for physical score, 0.65 for emotional score, and 0.66 for functional score. Specificities were between 0.69 and 0.77 for total score and emotional score, respectively. Therefore, BMX demonstrates potential as a candidate serum biomarker of exacerbating dizziness post-mTBI.
-
Journal of neurotrauma · May 2021
Domino Effect of Interleukin-15 and CD8 T-Cell-Mediated Neuronal Apoptosis in Experimental Traumatic Brain Injury.
The effects of local factors on activation of immune cells infiltrating the central nervous system (CNS) in a rat model of traumatic brain injury (TBI) remain elusive. The cytokine, interleukin (IL)-15, is crucial for development and activation of CD8 T lymphocytes, a prominent lymphocytic population present in TBI lesions. We investigated whether IL-15 originates from astrocytes and whether IL-15 can evoke the CD8 T-lymphocyte response in TBI. ⋯ FC pre-treatment was also associated with downregulated IL-15 expression and CD8 T-cell activation as well as decreased levels of neuronal apoptosis, suggesting that IL-15 initiated a domino effect toward apoptosis. In contrast, rats pre-treated with recombinant rat IL-15 showed upregulated CD8 T-cell numbers and Gra-b levels, in addition to induction of neuronal apoptosis. Together, our results indicated that IL-15 could induce neuronal apoptosis by enhancing CD8 T-cell function in a rat model of TBI.