Jo Jacob, Wong Gunther, Williams Kristen L, Davis Philip J, Rigney Grant H, Zuckerman Scott L, Terry Douglas P
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee.
Vanderbilt Sport Concussion Center, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee.
Clin J Sport Med. 2025 Jan 1;35(1):52-59. doi: 10.1097/JSM.0000000000001251. Epub 2024 Jul 11.
To evaluate whether early age of first exposure to contact sports (AFE-CS) is associated with worse long-term brain health outcomes.
A cross-sectional, survey study of older men with a history of contact sport participation was completed.
Tertiary care facility.
A cohort of community-dwelling older men dichotomized by using AFE-CS (<12 years vs ≥12 years).
Independent variables included a dichotomized group of AFE-CS (<12 years vs ≥12 years).
Brain health outcomes measured by depression, anxiety, cognitive difficulties, and neurobehavioral symptoms. Endorsements of general health problems, motor symptoms, and psychiatric history were also collected. Age of first exposure groups was compared using t tests, χ 2 tests, and multivariable linear regressions, which included the following covariates: age, number of prior concussions, and total years of contact sport.
Of 69 men aged 70.5 ± 8.0 years, approximately one-third of the sample (34.8%) reported AFE-CS before age 12 years. That group had more years of contact sports (10.8 ± 9.2 years) compared with those with AFE-CS ≥12 (5.6 ± 4.5 years; P = 0.02). No differences were found after univariate testing between AFE-CS groups on all outcomes ( P -values >0.05). Multivariable models suggest that AFE-CS is not a predictor of depression or anxiety. Those in the AFE-CS <12 group had fewer cognitive difficulties ( P = 0.03) and fewer neurobehavioral symptoms ( P = 0.03).
Those with AFE-CS <12 to contact sports did not have worse long-term brain health outcomes compared with those with AFE-CS ≥12. Individuals with AFE-CS <12 had significantly lower British Columbia Cognitive Complaints Inventory and Neurobehavioral Symptom Inventory scores compared with those with AFE-CS ≥12.
The benefits of earlier AFE-CS may outweigh the risks of head strikes and result in comparable long-term brain health outcomes.
评估首次接触对抗性运动的年龄(AFE-CS)较小是否与更差的长期脑健康结果相关。
对有对抗性运动参与史的老年男性进行了一项横断面调查研究。
三级医疗保健机构。
一组社区居住的老年男性,根据AFE-CS(<12岁与≥12岁)进行二分。
自变量包括AFE-CS的二分分组(<12岁与≥12岁)。
通过抑郁、焦虑、认知困难和神经行为症状来衡量脑健康结果。还收集了一般健康问题、运动症状和精神病史的认可情况。使用t检验、χ²检验和多变量线性回归比较首次接触年龄组,多变量线性回归包括以下协变量:年龄、既往脑震荡次数和对抗性运动的总年数。
在69名年龄为70.5±8.0岁的男性中,约三分之一的样本(34.8%)报告AFE-CS在12岁之前。与AFE-CS≥12岁的男性相比,该组进行对抗性运动的年数更多(10.8±9.2年对5.6±4.5年;P = 0.02)。在单变量检验中,AFE-CS组在所有结局方面均未发现差异(P值>0.05)。多变量模型表明,AFE-CS不是抑郁或焦虑的预测因素。AFE-CS<12岁组的认知困难较少(P = 0.03),神经行为症状也较少(P = 0.03)。
与AFE-CS≥12岁的男性相比,AFE-CS<12岁接触对抗性运动的男性长期脑健康结果并不更差。与AFE-CS≥12岁的男性相比,AFE-CS<12岁的个体的不列颠哥伦比亚认知投诉量表和神经行为症状量表得分显著更低。
较早的AFE-CS的益处可能超过头部撞击的风险,并导致相当的长期脑健康结果。