Division of Behavioral Medicine & Clinical Psychology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center; Department of Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Emory Sports Performance and Research Center, Flowery Branch, Georgia, USA.
J Neurotrauma. 2022 Jan;39(1-2):49-57. doi: 10.1089/neu.2021.0078. Epub 2021 Dec 14.
This prospective longitudinal trial aimed to (1) determine the role of head impact exposure on behavioral/cognitive outcomes, and (2) assess the protective effect(s) of a jugular vein compression (JVC) collar on behavioral/cognitive outcomes after one season of high-school football. Participants included 284 male high-school football players aged 13-18 years enrolled from seven Midwestern high-schools. Schools were allocated to the JVC collar intervention (four teams, 140 players) or no collar/no intervention control (three teams, 144 players) condition. Head impact exposure was measured throughout the season using CSx accelerometers. Outcome measures included post-season parent and adolescent report on Strengths and Weaknesses of ADHD Symptoms and Normal Behavior Scale SWAN) and Post-Concussion Symptom Inventory (PCSI), as well as adolescent performance on Attention Network Task (ANT), digital Trail Making Task (dTMT), and Cued Switching task. No significant effect of head impact exposure or JVC collar use on post-season SWAN or PCSI scores or performance on dTMT and Cued Switching task were noted. There was no effect of head impact exposure on ANT performance; however, the JVC collar group had greater post-season Alerting network scores than the no collar group ( = 0.026, = 0.22). Findings provide preliminary evidence that the JVC collar may provide some protection to the alerting attention system. These findings should be interpreted cautiously as a greater understanding of the long-term sequelae of head impact exposure and the role of cumulative head impact exposure behavioral/cognitive outcomes is required.
(1) 确定头部撞击暴露对行为/认知结果的作用,以及 (2) 评估在一个高中足球赛季后,颈静脉压迫 (JVC) 领对行为/认知结果的保护作用。参与者包括来自中西部 7 所高中的 284 名 13-18 岁的男性高中足球运动员。学校被分配到 JVC 领干预组(4 个队,140 名运动员)或无领/无干预对照组(3 个队,144 名运动员)。使用 CSx 加速度计在整个赛季中测量头部撞击暴露。结果测量包括赛季后的父母和青少年对注意力缺陷多动障碍症状和正常行为量表 (SWAN) 和脑震荡后症状量表 (PCSI) 的报告,以及青少年在注意力网络任务 (ANT)、数字追踪任务 (dTMT) 和线索转换任务上的表现。头部撞击暴露或 JVC 领使用对季节后的 SWAN 或 PCSI 评分或 dTMT 和线索转换任务的表现没有显著影响。头部撞击暴露对 ANT 表现没有影响;然而,JVC 领组在季节后的警觉网络得分高于无领组 ( = 0.026, = 0.22)。研究结果初步表明,JVC 领可能对警觉注意力系统提供一定的保护。由于需要更深入地了解头部撞击暴露的长期后果以及累积头部撞击暴露对行为/认知结果的作用,因此应谨慎解释这些发现。