Earlier Age of First Exposure to Competitive Fighting Has an Adverse Impact on Neuropsychiatric Symptoms and Brain Volume
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Abstract
Objective The objective of this study was to determine whether individuals who began fighting competitively at a younger age experienced adverse brain health outcomes compared to fighters who began competing at an older age.
Background Established literature has made clear that fighting sports such as boxing and mixed martial arts can lead to head injury. Prior work from this group on the Professional Fighters Brain Health Study (PFBHS) found that exposure to repetitive head impacts is associated with lower brain volumes and decreased processing speed in fighters.
Design/Methods As part of the PFBHS, current and previously licensed professional fighters were recruited, divided into active and retired cohorts, and matched with a control group that had no prior experience in sports with likely head trauma. This present study examined the relationship between age of first exposure (AFE) to fighting sports and brain structure (MRI regional volume), cognitive performance (CNS Vital Signs, iComet C3), and clinical neuropsychiatric symptoms (PHQ-9, Barratt Impulsiveness Scale).
Results Brain MRI data showed significant correlations between earlier AFE and smaller bilateral hippocampal and posterior corpus callosum volumes for both retired and active fighters. Earlier AFE in active fighters was correlated with decreased processing speed and decreased psychomotor speed. Retired fighters showed a correlation between earlier AFE and higher measures of depression and impulsivity.
Conclusions The findings of this study help to inform clinicians, governing bodies, parents, and athletes of the risks associated with beginning to compete in fighting sports at a young age.
Footnotes
Disclosure: Dr. Bryant has nothing to disclose. The institution of an immediate family member of Dr. Narapareddy has received research support from NIH. Mr. Bray has nothing to disclose. Ms. Richey has nothing to disclose. Mr. Krieg has nothing to disclose. Dr. Shan has nothing to disclose. Dr. Peters has nothing to disclose. Dr. Bernick has received personal compensation in the range of $500–$4,999 for serving as a Consultant for Biogen. Dr. Bernick has received personal compensation in the range of $500–$4,999 for serving on a Scientific Advisory or Data Safety Monitoring board for Biogen. Dr. Bernick has received stock or an ownership interest from Aurora. The institution of Dr. Bernick has received research support from UFC. The institution of Dr. Bernick has received research support from Top Rank Promotions. The institution of Dr. Bernick has received research support from Haymon Boxing. The institution of Dr. Bernick has received research support from Las Vegas Raiders. The institution of Dr. Bernick has received research support from Professional Bull Riders.
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