Literature DB >> 22913765

Impaired cerebral haemodynamic function associated with chronic traumatic brain injury in professional boxers.

Damian M Bailey1, Daniel W Jones, Andrew Sinnott, Julien V Brugniaux, Karl J New, Danielle Hodson, Christopher J Marley, Jonathan D Smirl, Shigehiko Ogoh, Philip N Ainslie.   

Abstract

The present study examined to what extent professional boxing compromises cerebral haemodynamic function and its association with CTBI (chronic traumatic brain injury). A total of 12 male professional boxers were compared with 12 age-, gender- and physical fitness-matched non-boxing controls. We assessed dCA (dynamic cerebral autoregulation; thigh-cuff technique and transfer function analysis), CVRCO₂ (cerebrovascular reactivity to changes in CO₂: 5% CO₂ and controlled hyperventilation), orthostatic tolerance (supine to standing) and neurocognitive function (psychometric tests). Blood flow velocity in the middle cerebral artery (transcranial Doppler ultrasound), mean arterial blood pressure (finger photoplethysmography), end-tidal CO₂ (capnography) and cortical oxyhaemoglobin concentration (near-IR spectroscopy) were continuously measured. Boxers were characterized by fronto-temporal neurocognitive dysfunction and impaired dCA as indicated by a lower rate of regulation and autoregulatory index (P<0.05 compared with controls). Likewise, CVRCO₂ was also reduced resulting in a lower CVRCO₂ range (P<0.05 compared with controls). The latter was most marked in boxers with the highest CTBI scores and correlated against the volume and intensity of sparring during training (r=-0.84, P<0.05). These impairments coincided with more marked orthostatic hypotension, cerebral hypoperfusion and corresponding cortical de-oxygenation during orthostatic stress (P<0.05 compared with controls). In conclusion, these findings provide the first comprehensive evidence for chronically impaired cerebral haemodynamic function in active boxers due to the mechanical trauma incurred by repetitive, sub-concussive head impact incurred during sparring training. This may help explain why CTBI is a progressive disease that manifests beyond the active boxing career.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 22913765     DOI: 10.1042/CS20120259

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Sci (Lond)        ISSN: 0143-5221            Impact factor:   6.124


  43 in total

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Authors:  Julien V Brugniaux; Christopher J Marley; Danielle A Hodson; Karl J New; Damian M Bailey
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6.  Imaging of Cerebrovascular Function in Chronic Traumatic Brain Injury.

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7.  Rapid changes in vascular compliance contribute to cerebrovascular adjustments during transient reductions in blood pressure in young, healthy adults.

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Review 8.  The Role of Nitric Oxide and Sympathetic Control in Cerebral Autoregulation in the Setting of Subarachnoid Hemorrhage and Traumatic Brain Injury.

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Review 10.  Traumatic brain injury-induced autoregulatory dysfunction and spreading depression-related neurovascular uncoupling: Pathomechanisms, perspectives, and therapeutic implications.

Authors:  Peter Toth; Nikolett Szarka; Eszter Farkas; Erzsebet Ezer; Endre Czeiter; Krisztina Amrein; Zoltan Ungvari; Jed A Hartings; Andras Buki; Akos Koller
Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol       Date:  2016-09-09       Impact factor: 4.733

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