Concussions Slow Brain Activity of High School Football Players
Reports have emerged in recent years warning about the potential harms of youth contact sports on developing brains. Contact sports, including high school football, carry a risk of concussion. Symptoms of concussion commonly include cognitive disturbances, such as difficulty with balancing, memory or concentration.
Many concussion studies focus on periodic brain signals. These signals appear in rhythmic patterns and contribute to brain functions such as attention, movement or sensory processing. Not much is known about how concussions affect other aspects of brain function, specifically, brain signals that are not rhythmic.
"Most previous neuroscience research has focused on rhythmic brain signaling, which is also called periodic neurophysiology," said study lead author
Aperiodic activity is typically treated as 'background noise' on brain scans, but recent studies have shown that this background noise may play a key role in how the brain functions.
"While it's often overlooked, aperiodic activity is important because it reflects brain cortical excitability," said study senior author
Cortical excitability is a vital part of brain function. It reflects how nerve cells, or neurons, in the brain's cortex respond to stimulation and plays a key role in cognitive functions like learning and memory, information processing, decision making, motor control, wakefulness and sleep.
To gain a better understanding of brain rhythms and trauma, the researchers sought to identify the impacts of concussions on aperiodic activity.
Pre- and post-season resting-state magnetoencephalography (MEG) data was collected from 91 high school football players, of whom 10 were diagnosed with a concussion. MEG is a neuroimaging technique that measures the magnetic fields that the brain's electrical currents produce.
A clinical evaluation tool for concussions called the Post-Concussive Symptom Inventory was correlated with pre- and post-season physical, cognitive and behavioral symptoms.
High school football players who sustained concussions displayed slowed aperiodic activity. Aperiodic slowing was strongly associated with worse post-concussion cognitive symptoms and test scores.
Slowed aperiodic activity was present in areas of the brain that contain chemicals linked with concussion symptoms like impaired concentration and memory.
"This study is important because it provides insight into both the mechanisms and the clinical implications of concussion in the maturing adolescent brain," said co-lead author
The results highlight the importance of protective measures in contact sports. The researchers cautioned that young players should always take the necessary time to fully recover from a concussion before returning to any sport.
The findings from the study may also influence tracking of post-concussion symptoms and aid in finding new treatments to improve recovery.
"Our study opens the door to new ways of understanding and diagnosing concussions, using this novel type of brain activity that is associated with concussion symptoms,"
Other co-authors are
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants R01NS082453 and R01NS091602, NIH grant F32-NS119375, a Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship (BPF-186555), and a CIHR Canada Research Chair (CRC-2023-00300).
Note: Copies of RSNA 2024 news releases and electronic images will be available online at RSNA.org/press24.
RSNA is an association of radiologists, radiation oncologists, medical physicists and related scientists promoting excellence in patient care and health care delivery through education, research and technologic innovation. The Society is based in
For patient-friendly information on brain imaging, visit RadiologyInfo.org.
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SOURCE Radiological Society of North America (RSNA)
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