A systematic review of potential long-term effects of sport-related concussion
University of California, San Francisco · Neurological Surgery · +25 more institutions
Abstract
Systematic review of possible long-term effects of sports-related concussion in retired athletes. DATA SOURCES: Ten electronic databases. STUDY SELECTION: 10 years after the injury. DATA EXTRACTION: Study population, exposure/outcome measures, clinical data, neurological examination findings, cognitive assessment, neuroimaging findings and neuropathology results. Risk of bias and level of evidence were evaluated by two authors.
Following review of 3819 studies, 47 met inclusion criteria. Some former athletes have depression and cognitive deficits later in life, and there is an association between these deficits and multiple prior concussions. Former athletes are not at increased risk for death by suicide (two studies). Former high school American football players do not appear to be at increased risk for later life neurodegenerative diseases (two studies). Some retired professional American football players may be at increased risk for diminishment in cognitive functioning or mild cognitive impairment (several studies), and neurodegenerative diseases (one study). Neuroimaging studies show modest evidence of macrostructural, microstructural, functional and neurochemical changes in some athletes.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.75
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 76
Authors
15- GTGeoffrey T. ManleyCorresponding
University of California, San Francisco, Neurological Surgery
- AJAndrew J. Gardner
John Hunter Hospital, Hunter New England Local Health District, University of Newcastle Australia
- KSKathryn Schneider
University of Calgary, Alberta Children's Hospital, Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute, Hotchkiss Brain Institute
- KMKevin M. Guskiewicz
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- JEJulian E. Bailes
NorthShore University HealthSystem, University of Chicago
Topics & keywords
- Concussion
- Term (time)
- Medicine
- Physical medicine and rehabilitation
- Physical therapy
- MEDLINE
- Injury prevention
- Poison control
- Good health and well-being