Grijalva Carissa, Hale Dallin, Wu Lyndia, Toosizadeh Nima, Laksari Kaveh
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, United States.
Department of Physiology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, United States.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2023 Sep 14;17:1191284. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2023.1191284. eCollection 2023.
Sub-concussive head impacts in soccer are drawing increasing research attention regarding their acute and long-term effects as players may experience thousands of headers in a single season. During these impacts, the head experiences rapid acceleration similar to what occurs during a concussion, but without the clinical implications. The physical mechanism and response to repetitive impacts are not completely understood. The objective of this work was to examine the immediate functional outcomes of sub-concussive level impacts from soccer heading in a natural, non-laboratory environment.
Twenty university level soccer athletes were instrumented with sensor-mounted bite bars to record impacts from 10 consecutive soccer headers. Pre- and post-header measurements were collected to determine hyper-acute changes, i.e., within minutes after exposure. This included measuring blood flow velocity using transcranial Doppler (TCD) ultrasound, oxyhemoglobin concentration using functional near infrared spectroscopy imaging (fNIRS), and upper extremity dual-task (UEF) neurocognitive testing.
On average, the athletes experienced 30.7 ± 8.9 g peak linear acceleration and 7.2 ± 3.1 rad/s peak angular velocity, respectively. Results from fNIRS measurements showed an increase in the brain oxygenation for the left prefrontal cortex (PC) ( = 0.002), and the left motor cortex (MC) ( = 0.007) following the soccer headers. Additional analysis of the fNIRS time series demonstrates increased sample entropy of the signal after the headers in the right PC ( = 0.02), right MC ( = 0.004), and left MC ( = 0.04).
These combined results reveal some variations in brain oxygenation immediately detected after repetitive headers. Significant changes in balance and neurocognitive function were not observed in this study, indicating a mild level of head impacts. This is the first study to observe hemodynamic changes immediately after sub-concussive impacts using non-invasive portable imaging technology. In combination with head kinematic measurements, this information can give new insights and a framework for immediate monitoring of sub-concussive impacts on the head.
足球运动中的次脑震荡头部撞击因其急性和长期影响正吸引着越来越多的研究关注,因为球员在一个赛季中可能会经历数千次头球。在这些撞击过程中,头部经历的快速加速度与脑震荡时相似,但没有临床症状。对重复性撞击的物理机制和反应尚未完全了解。这项研究的目的是在自然、非实验室环境中研究足球头球次脑震荡水平撞击的即时功能结果。
20名大学水平的足球运动员佩戴装有传感器的咬杆,记录连续10次足球头球的撞击情况。在头球前后进行测量,以确定超急性变化,即在接触后的几分钟内。这包括使用经颅多普勒(TCD)超声测量血流速度、使用功能近红外光谱成像(fNIRS)测量氧合血红蛋白浓度,以及进行上肢双任务(UEF)神经认知测试。
运动员平均分别经历了30.7±8.9g的峰值线性加速度和7.2±3.1rad/s的峰值角速度。fNIRS测量结果显示,足球头球后左前额叶皮层(PC)(P = 0.002)和左运动皮层(MC)(P = 0.007)的脑氧合增加。对fNIRS时间序列的进一步分析表明,头球后右侧PC(P = 0.02)、右侧MC(P = 0.004)和左侧MC(P = 0.04)信号的样本熵增加。
这些综合结果揭示了重复性头球后立即检测到的脑氧合存在一些变化。本研究未观察到平衡和神经认知功能的显著变化,表明头部撞击程度较轻。这是第一项使用非侵入性便携式成像技术观察次脑震荡撞击后立即出现的血流动力学变化的研究。结合头部运动学测量,这些信息可以为即时监测头部次脑震荡撞击提供新的见解和框架。