职业拳击手的胜负记录与神经精神症状和大脑健康的关系

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Barry R Bryant, Aaron I Esagoff, Lisa Young, Natalia Kosyakova, Michael J C Bray, Lisa N Richey, Varun Vohra, Guogen Shan, Andrea L C Schneider, Matthew E Peters, Charles B Bernick, Bharat R Narapareddy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:职业格斗中重复的头部撞击通常会导致头部受伤。根据职业格斗次数和格斗年限来衡量,重复性头部创伤暴露的增加与较慢的处理速度和较小的脑容量有关。胜负结果的影响已在其他体育项目中进行过调查,有几项研究表明,输掉比赛的队伍中的个人会受到更多的头部伤害。在此,作者假设,比赛记录较差的拳击手会表现出更差的大脑健康状况:职业拳击手脑健康研究调查了职业拳击手和综合格斗选手的神经精神症状、区域脑容量和认知能力的变化。这些数据被用来评估职业拳击手(人数=212)的胜负率与脑健康结果之间的关系,评估采用了经过验证的神经精神症状和认知测量方法以及核磁共振成像数据:结果:战绩较好的退役拳手表现得更冲动(B=0.21,df=48),处理速度更慢(B=-0.42,df=31)。在任何神经精神或认知测试中,战绩较好的拳击手并不比战绩较差的拳击手表现得更好。在皮层下灰质、胼胝体前部、左侧和右侧海马体、左侧和右侧杏仁核以及左侧丘脑中,有较好格斗记录的退役格斗运动员的脑容量较小。更多成功的现役拳击手的左侧杏仁核体积较小:这些研究结果表明,在退役格斗运动员中,较好的格斗记录与较强的冲动性、较慢的处理速度以及某些区域较小的脑容量有关。这项研究表明,即使是成功的拳击手也会对大脑健康产生不利影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Association of Win-Loss Record With Neuropsychiatric Symptoms and Brain Health Among Professional Fighters.

Objective: Repetitive head impacts in professional fighting commonly lead to head injuries. Increased exposure to repetitive head trauma, measured by the number of professional fights and years of fighting, has been associated with slower processing speed and smaller brain volumes. The impact of win-loss outcomes has been investigated in other sports, with several studies suggesting that individuals on losing teams experience more head injuries. Here, the authors hypothesized that fighters with a worse fight record would exhibit poorer brain health outcomes.

Methods: The Professional Fighters Brain Health Study examined changes in neuropsychiatric symptoms, regional brain volume, and cognition among professional boxers and mixed martial arts fighters. These data were used to evaluate the relationship between win-loss ratios and brain health outcomes among professional fighters (N=212) by using validated neuropsychiatric symptom and cognitive measures and MRI data.

Results: Retired fighters with a better record demonstrated more impulsiveness (B=0.21, df=48) and slower processing speed (B=-0.42, df=31). More successful fighters did not perform better than fighters with worse records on any neuropsychiatric or cognitive test. Retired fighters with better fight records had smaller brain volumes in the subcortical gray matter, anterior corpus callosum, left and right hippocampi, left and right amygdala, and left thalamus. More successful active fighters had a smaller left amygdala volume.

Conclusions: These findings suggest that among retired fighters, a better fight record was associated with greater impulsiveness, slower processing speed, and smaller brain volume in certain regions. This study shows that even successful fighters experience adverse effects on brain health.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.40%
发文量
67
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: As the official Journal of the American Neuropsychiatric Association, the premier North American organization of clinicians, scientists, and educators specializing in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry, neuropsychology, and the clinical neurosciences, the Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences (JNCN) aims to publish works that advance the science of brain-behavior relationships, the care of persons and families affected by neurodevelopmental, acquired neurological, and neurodegenerative conditions, and education and training in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry. JNCN publishes peer-reviewed articles on the cognitive, emotional, and behavioral manifestations of neurological conditions, the structural and functional neuroanatomy of idiopathic psychiatric disorders, and the clinical and educational applications and public health implications of scientific advances in these areas. The Journal features systematic reviews and meta-analyses, narrative reviews, original research articles, scholarly considerations of treatment and educational challenges in behavioral neurology & neuropsychiatry, analyses and commentaries on advances and emerging trends in the field, international perspectives on neuropsychiatry, opinions and introspections, case reports that inform on the structural and functional bases of neuropsychiatric conditions, and classic pieces from the field’s rich history.
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