皮层兴奋性降低与青少年足球运动员脑震荡后的认知症状有关。

Kevin C Yu, Alex I Wiesman, Elizabeth Davenport, Laura A Flashman, Jillian Urban, Srikantan S Nagarajan, Kiran Solingpuram Sai, Joel Stitzel, Joseph A Maldjian, Christopher T Whitlow
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美式橄榄球与高脑震荡发生率有关,会导致神经生理紊乱和使人衰弱的临床症状。以往对脑震荡的神经生理学影响的研究在很大程度上忽视了非周期性神经生理学活动。我们研究了高中橄榄球赛季中的脑震荡是否与非周期性和周期性神经生理活动的变化有关,以及这些变化是否与临床结果有关。我们收集了 91 名高中橄榄球运动员的赛季前和赛季后静息状态脑电图数据,其中 10 人被诊断为脑震荡。对数据进行了源成像、频率转换和参数化处理,并使用线性混合模型来研究脑震荡对神经生理活动从赛季前到赛季后变化的影响。脑震荡后症状量表的评分与赛季前到赛季后的神经生理学变化相关联,以确定其临床相关性。脑震荡与额叶上皮层的非周期性指数增加有关,表明皮层兴奋性相对降低。这种非周期性神经生理学的减慢介导了脑震荡对原始δ和γ功率的影响,并与所有参与者认知能力下降有关。在脑震荡的情况下,后部皮层的非周期性校正后的α和θ节律活动的前后变化也有所下降。这些研究结果表明,脑震荡同时改变了大脑皮层的兴奋性和节律信号,其空间拓扑结构不同,对临床症状的影响也不同。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reduced Cortical Excitability is Associated with Cognitive Symptoms in Concussed Adolescent Football Players.

Background: American tackle football is associated with high rates of concussion, leading to neurophysiological disturbances and debilitating clinical symptoms. Previous investigations of the neurophysiological effects of concussion have largely ignored aperiodic neurophysiological activity, which is a marker of cortical excitability.

Purpose: We examined whether concussion during a season of high school football is related to changes in aperiodic and periodic neurophysiological activity and whether any such changes are associated with clinical outcomes.

Materials and methods: Pre- and post-season resting-state magnetoencephalography (MEG) data were collected from 91 high school football players over as many as four seasons of play, for a total of 278 data collections. During these seasons of football play, a cohort of 10 individuals were diagnosed with concussion. MEG data were source-imaged, frequency-transformed and parameterized, and linear mixed models were used to examine effects of concussion on pre-to-post-season changes in neurophysiological activity. Scores on the Post-Concussive Symptom Inventory were correlated with pre-to-post-season neurophysiological changes to determine their clinical relevance.

Results: Concussion was associated with increased aperiodic exponents in superior frontal cortices, indicating a relative reduction in cortical excitability. This slowing of aperiodic neurophysiology mediated concussion effects on raw delta and gamma power and was associated with worse cognitive concerns across participants. Pre-to-post-season changes in aperiodic-corrected alpha and theta rhythmic activity were also decreased in posterior cortices in concussed players.

Conclusion: These findings indicate that concussion alters both the excitability and rhythmic signaling of the cortex, with differing spatial topographies and implications for clinical symptoms.

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