Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Harvard Medical School, Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Spaulding Research Institute, MassGeneral Hospital for Children Sports Concussion Program, and Home Base, A Red Sox Foundation and Massachusetts General Hospital Program, Charlestown, Massachusetts and.
Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, UNC Memorial Hospital, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Clin J Sport Med. 2022 Mar 1;32(2):86-94. doi: 10.1097/JSM.0000000000000898.
To examine whether middle-aged men who played high-school football experience worse mental health or cognitive functioning than men who did not play high-school football.
Cross-sectional cohort study.
Online survey completed remotely.
A total of 435 men between the ages of 35 and 55 completed the study, of whom 407 were included in the analyses after excluding participants who answered embedded validity items incorrectly (n = 16), played semiprofessional football (n = 2), or experienced a recent concussion (n = 10).
Self-reported high school football participation, compared with those who played contact sports, noncontact sports, and no sports.
A lifetime history of depression or anxiety; mental health or cognitive problems in the past year; current depression symptoms, and post-concussion-like symptoms.
Middle-aged men who played high-school football did not have a higher prevalence of being prescribed medication for anxiety or depression or receiving treatment from a mental health professional. Similarly, there were no significant differences between groups on the rates in which they endorsed depression, anxiety, anger, concentration problems, memory problems, headaches, migraines, neck or back pain, or chronic pain over the past year. A greater proportion of those who played football reported sleep problems over the past year and reported being prescribed medication for chronic pain and for headaches.
Men who played high-school football did not report worse brain health compared with those who played other contact sports, noncontact sports, or did not participate in sports during high school.
探讨在中学踢过足球的中年男性是否比未踢过中学足球的男性心理健康或认知功能更差。
横断面队列研究。
在线调查远程完成。
共有 435 名年龄在 35 岁至 55 岁之间的男性完成了这项研究,其中 407 名参与者在排除答错嵌入式有效性问题的参与者(n=16)、踢半职业足球的参与者(n=2)或最近有脑震荡的参与者(n=10)后被纳入分析。
自我报告的中学足球参与情况,与那些参加接触性运动、非接触性运动和不参加运动的人相比。
终生抑郁或焦虑史;过去一年的心理健康或认知问题;当前抑郁症状和脑震荡后样症状。
在中学踢过足球的中年男性并没有更高的焦虑或抑郁药物处方率,也没有更高的接受心理健康专业治疗的比例。同样,在抑郁、焦虑、愤怒、注意力问题、记忆问题、头痛、偏头痛、颈部或背部疼痛或慢性疼痛的发生率方面,各组之间也没有显著差异。过去一年,更多踢足球的人报告存在睡眠问题,且报告因慢性疼痛和头痛而服用药物。
与踢其他接触性运动、非接触性运动或中学时不参加运动的男性相比,踢过中学足球的男性报告的大脑健康状况并未更差。