Academic Rheumatology, School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, UK
Centre for Sport, Exercise and Osteoarthritis Versus Arthritis, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
BMJ Open. 2022 Apr 4;12(4):e054371. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-054371.
Professional footballers commonly experience sports-related injury and repetitive microtrauma to the foot and ankle, placing them at risk of subsequent chronic pain and osteoarthritis (OA) of the foot and ankle. Similarly, repeated heading of the ball, head/neck injuries and concussion have been implicated in later development of neurodegenerative diseases such as dementia. A recent retrospective study found that death from neurodegenerative diseases was higher among former professional soccer players compared with age matched controls. However, well-designed lifetime studies are still needed to provide evidence regarding the prevalence of these conditions and their associated risk factors in retired professional football players compared with the general male population.
To determine whether former professional male footballers have a higher prevalence than the general male population of: (1) foot/ankle pain and radiographic OA; and (2) cognitive and motor impairments associated with dementia and Parkinson's disease. Secondary objectives are to identify specific football-related risk factors such as head impact/concussion for neurodegenerative conditions and foot/ankle injuries for chronic foot/ankle pain and OA.
This is a cross-sectional, comparative study involving a questionnaire survey with subsamples of responders being assessed for cognitive function by telephone assessment, and foot/ankle OA by radiographic examination. A sample of 900 adult, male, ex professional footballers will be recruited and compared with a control group of 1100 age-matched general population men between 40 and 100 years old. Prevalence will be estimated per group. Poisson regression will be performed to determine prevalence ratio between the populations and logistic regression will be used to examine risk factors associated with each condition in footballers.
This study was approved by the East Midlands-Leicester Central Research Ethics Committee on 23 January 2020 (REC ref: 19/EM/0354). The study results will be disseminated at national and international meetings and submitted for peer-review publication.
职业足球运动员经常因运动相关的损伤和足部及踝关节的重复性微创伤而受伤,使他们面临随后足部和踝关节慢性疼痛和骨关节炎(OA)的风险。同样,反复头球、头部/颈部受伤和脑震荡也与痴呆等神经退行性疾病的后期发展有关。最近的一项回顾性研究发现,与年龄匹配的对照组相比,前职业足球运动员死于神经退行性疾病的比例更高。然而,仍需要精心设计的终身研究来提供有关这些疾病在退役职业足球运动员中的流行程度及其与一般男性人群相关的风险因素的证据。
确定前职业男性足球运动员是否比一般男性人群更普遍患有以下疾病:(1)足部/踝关节疼痛和放射学 OA;(2)与痴呆症和帕金森病相关的认知和运动障碍。次要目标是确定特定的与足球相关的风险因素,例如头部冲击/脑震荡与神经退行性疾病的关系,以及足部/踝关节损伤与慢性足部/踝关节疼痛和 OA 的关系。
这是一项横断面、比较性研究,涉及问卷调查,对响应者的亚组进行电话评估认知功能和放射学检查足部/踝关节 OA。将招募 900 名成年男性前职业足球运动员,并将其与年龄匹配的 1100 名 40 至 100 岁的一般人群男性对照组进行比较。将估计每组的患病率。将使用泊松回归确定人群之间的患病率比,并使用逻辑回归检查与足球运动员每种疾病相关的风险因素。
本研究于 2020 年 1 月 23 日获得东米德兰兹-莱斯特中央研究伦理委员会的批准(REC 参考:19/EM/0354)。研究结果将在国家和国际会议上公布,并提交同行评审发表。