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搏击和大脑:职业综合格斗运动员搏击与区域性大脑体积的关联。

Sparring and the Brain: The Associations between Sparring and Regional Brain Volumes in Professional Mixed Martial Arts Fighters.

机构信息

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 5300 Alpha Commons Drive, Baltimore, MD, 21224, USA.

College of Public Health and Health Professions and College of Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.

出版信息

Sports Med. 2023 Aug;53(8):1641-1649. doi: 10.1007/s40279-023-01838-9. Epub 2023 Mar 27.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Mixed martial arts (MMA) fighters, due to exposure to repetitive head impacts, are at risk for brain atrophy and neurodegenerative sequelae. Simultaneously, motor skills training and cognition-rich activities have been linked with larger regional brain volumes. The majority of an MMA fighter's sporting activity occurs during practice (e.g., sparring) rather than formal competition. This study, therefore, aims to be the first to explore regional brain volumes associated with sparring in MMA fighters.

METHODS

Ninety-four active, professional MMA fighters from the Professional Fighters Brain Health Study met inclusion criteria for this cross-sectional analysis. Adjusted multivariable regression analyses were utilized to examine the relationship between the number of sparring practice rounds per week during typical training and a select number of regional brain volumes (i.e., caudate, thalamus, putamen, hippocampus, amygdala).

RESULTS

A higher number of weekly sparring rounds during training was significantly associated with larger left (beta = 13.5 µL/round, 95% CI 2.26-24.8) and right (beta = 14.9 µL/round, 95% CI 3.64-26.2) caudate volumes. Sparring was not significantly associated with left or right thalamus, putamen, hippocampus, or amygdala volumes.

CONCLUSIONS

More weekly rounds of sparring was not significantly associated with smaller volumes in any of the brain regions studied in active, professional MMA fighters. Sparring's significant association with larger caudate volume raises questions about whether fighters who spar more experience attenuated trauma-related decreases in caudate volume relative to fighters who spar less, whether fighters who spar more experience minimal or even positive changes to caudate volume, whether baseline differences in caudate size may have mediated results, or whether some other mechanism may be at play. Given limitations inherent to the cross-sectional study design, more research is needed to further explore the brain effects of sparring in MMA.

摘要

背景

混合武术(MMA)运动员由于反复受到头部撞击,存在脑萎缩和神经退行性后遗症的风险。同时,运动技能训练和认知丰富的活动与更大的区域大脑体积有关。MMA 运动员的大部分运动活动发生在训练期间(例如,对打)而不是正式比赛中。因此,本研究旨在首次探索与 MMA 运动员对打相关的区域大脑体积。

方法

94 名来自专业格斗运动员脑健康研究的现役职业 MMA 运动员符合本横断面分析的纳入标准。利用调整后的多变量回归分析来研究在典型训练中每周进行的对打练习轮数与选定的一些区域大脑体积(即尾状核、丘脑、壳核、海马体、杏仁核)之间的关系。

结果

训练中每周进行的对打轮数越多,与左侧(β=13.5 µL/轮,95%置信区间 2.26-24.8)和右侧(β=14.9 µL/轮,95%置信区间 3.64-26.2)尾状核体积越大显著相关。对打与左侧或右侧丘脑、壳核、海马体或杏仁核体积均无显著相关性。

结论

在活跃的职业 MMA 运动员中,每周进行更多的对打轮数与任何研究区域的体积较小均无显著相关性。对打与尾状核体积较大显著相关,这引发了一些问题,例如,与对打较少的运动员相比,对打更多的运动员是否经历了与创伤相关的尾状核体积减少的减弱,或者对打更多的运动员是否经历了最小甚至积极的尾状核体积变化,基线尾状核大小的差异是否可能影响了结果,或者是否存在其他机制在起作用。由于横断面研究设计固有的局限性,需要进行更多的研究来进一步探索 MMA 中对打的大脑影响。

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