Myer Gregory D, Yuan Weihong, Barber Foss Kim D, Thomas Staci, Smith David, Leach James, Kiefer Adam W, Dicesare Chris, Adams Janet, Gubanich Paul J, Kitchen Katie, Schneider Daniel K, Braswell Daniel, Krueger Darcy, Altaye Mekibib
Division of Sports Medicine, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA Division of Sports Medicine, The SPORT Center, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA Department of Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati, College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA Department of Orthopaedics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA The Micheli Center for Sports Injury Prevention, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Pediatric Neuroimaging Research Consortium, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Br J Sports Med. 2016 Oct;50(20):1276-1285. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2016-096134. Epub 2016 Jun 15.
Historical approaches to protect the brain from outside the skull (eg, helmets and mouthpieces) have been ineffective in reducing internal injury to the brain that arises from energy absorption during sports-related collisions. We aimed to evaluate the effects of a neck collar, which applies gentle bilateral jugular vein compression, resulting in cerebral venous engorgement to reduce head impact energy absorption during collision. Specifically, we investigated the effect of collar wearing during head impact exposure on brain microstructure integrity following a competitive high school American football season.
A prospective longitudinal controlled trial was employed to evaluate the effects of collar wearing (n=32) relative to controls (CTRL; n=30) during one competitive football season (age: 17.04±0.67 years). Impact exposure was collected using helmet sensors and white matter (WM) integrity was quantified based on diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) serving as the primary outcome.
With similar overall g-forces and total head impact exposure experienced in the two study groups during the season (p>0.05), significant preseason to postseason changes in mean diffusivity, axial diffusivity and radial diffusivity in the WM integrity were noted in the CTRL group (corrected p<0.05) but not in the collar group (p>0.05). The CTRL group demonstrated significantly larger preseason to postseason DTI change in multiple WM regions compared with the collar group (corrected p<0.05).
Reduced WM diffusivity alteration was noted in participants wearing a neck collar after a season of competitive football. Collar wearing may have provided a protective effect against brain microstructural changes after repetitive head impacts.
NCT02696200.
以往保护颅骨外大脑的方法(如头盔和口器)在减少与运动相关碰撞中能量吸收所导致的脑内损伤方面效果不佳。我们旨在评估一种颈托的效果,该颈托通过双侧轻柔压迫颈静脉,使脑静脉充血,从而减少碰撞时头部撞击能量的吸收。具体而言,我们调查了在一个竞争激烈的高中美式橄榄球赛季中,头部受到撞击时佩戴颈托对脑微结构完整性的影响。
采用前瞻性纵向对照试验,评估在一个橄榄球赛季(年龄:17.04±0.67岁)中,佩戴颈托组(n=32)相对于对照组(CTRL;n=30)的效果。使用头盔传感器收集撞击暴露情况,并将基于扩散张量成像(DTI)量化的白质(WM)完整性作为主要结果。
在该赛季中,两个研究组经历的总体重力和总头部撞击暴露情况相似(p>0.05),对照组(校正p<0.05)白质完整性的平均扩散率、轴向扩散率和径向扩散率在季前赛到季后赛有显著变化,而颈托组则无变化(p>0.05)。与颈托组相比,对照组在多个白质区域的季前赛到季后赛DTI变化显著更大(校正p<0.05)。
在一个竞争激烈的橄榄球赛季后,佩戴颈托的参与者白质扩散率变化减小。佩戴颈托可能对反复头部撞击后的脑微结构变化起到了保护作用。
NCT02696200。