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Heading footballs 'affects memory'

Dharmabum

Well-Known Member
Aug 16, 2003
8,274
12,242
http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-37714830

Heading footballs 'affects memory'


Heading a football can significantly affect a player's brain function and memory for 24 hours, a study has found.


Researchers said they had identified "small but significant changes in brain function" after players headed the ball 20 times.

Memory performance was reduced by between 41% and 67% following the routine heading practice, with the effects wearing off after 24 hours.

The University of Stirling study was published in EBioMedicine.

It is the first to detect direct changes in the brain after players were exposed to everyday head impacts, as opposed to clinical brain injuries like concussion.

'Growing concern'
Researchers fired footballs from a machine designed to simulate the pace and power of a corner kick and asked a group of football players to head a ball 20 times.

The players' brain function and memory were tested before and after the exercise.

The university said it was yet to investigate whether the changes to the brain were temporary after repeated games of football or if there were long-term consequences on brain health.

Dr Magdalena Ietswaart, a cognitive neuroscientist at the University of Stirling, said the research had been carried out in the light of "growing concern" about links between brain injury in sport and the increased risk of dementia.

"Using a drill most amateur and professional teams would be familiar with, we found there was in fact increased inhibition in the brain immediately after heading and that performance on memory tests was reduced significantly," she said.

"Although the changes were temporary, we believe they are significant to brain health, particularly if they happen over and over again as they do in football heading.

"With large numbers of people around the world participating in this sport, it is important that they are aware of what is happening inside the brain and the lasting effect this may have."

Former Scottish Football Association chief executive Gordon Smith said Scotland should consider copying the American method by putting a ban in place to prevent youngsters heading the ball.

He said: "I do consider that it should be looked at for young players below a certain age. In football, for youngsters these days the ball is often in the air because they play smaller-sided games.

"We should try and discourage it from certain age groups in order to make sure there isn't any later effects on little kids."

But he added that if he had his time again, he would still play in the same way: "I think if I was given the choice to play again with the scenario that you were heading the ball and it could do some sort of damage, I would still agree to play.

"That was what I wanted to do more than anything in my life."


It's the unexpected nature of the test results that make them so devastating for football. None of the academics themselves thought that the mere act of heading a normal football a number of times, at a normal speed, as if in a normal situation, would give rise to an immediate reduction in brain function, and the onset memory loss, in the brains of two thirds of the participants tested.

Disturbingly the symptoms took 24 hours to clear. The question that popped into my head was: what if someone does this every day? Do they live a life in a permanently sub concussive state? How does this affect them in older life? What about youngsters whose brains are more prone to damage?

Oh we know about concussions, but we thought the days of heading an old, sodden, leather football were gone. We know about elbows and head knocks, and we know about footballers and rugby players with early onset dementia.

But we didn't know that just heading a ball caused so much damage to the brain.

Psychology professor Lindsay Wilson from Stirling University said: "There's been scepticism about whether there is a connection between soccer heading and changes in the brain, but this is evidence of both changes in inhibition and also in cognition immediately after heading.

"I think that together with evidence from previous studies it begins to paint a picture that raises concerns.

"What we really need here is more research to try and better understand what is going on."

When asked about the impact it could have on memory, Prof Wilson said: "The effects we are seeing are rather short term. We really need to identify in more detail what exactly is happening and how long these effects are lasting."

Dr Angus Hunter, reader in exercise physiology, added: "For the first time, sporting bodies and members of the public can see clear evidence of the risks associated with repetitive impact caused by heading a football.

"We hope these findings will open up new approaches for detecting, monitoring and preventing cumulative brain injuries in sport. We need to safeguard the long-term health of football players at all levels, as well as individuals involved in other contact sports."
 

worcestersauce

"I'm no optimist I'm just a prisoner of hope
Jan 23, 2006
26,996
45,305
I got half way through reading that and realised I had read it before, I'd forgotten.
One question that springs to mind is how often does a footballer head the ball 20 times in quick succession during a match?
 

aliyid

Well-Known Member
Dec 28, 2004
7,026
20,214
Meh, not much in it for me. While any kind of impact on an individuals head can have potential implications I think if it was as bad as some areas are making out then we'd see a lot more brain issues and trauma amongst previous generations (who used a significantly heavier ball than used nowadays).

Saw a feature on Sky Sports News where the daughter of Jeff Astle was campaigning to ban heading of footballs as a doctor had said that he had brain injuries similar to a boxer however a lot of people die of similar conditions (including my auntie who I was very close to and she had never headed a football in her life).
 

Spurs 1961

Well-Known Member
Aug 31, 2012
6,686
8,757
Try heading a ball back in the 60's! As a kid I instinctively knew that heading a ball was a stupid thing to do and played successfully as a goalscorer without hardly ever heading the ball. We even used to have some training of heading tennis, which I ducked out of.

I am not sure why fifty years later people are only starting to realise repeatedly heading a ball might be bad for you
 

WalkerboyUK

Well-Known Member
Jun 8, 2009
21,658
23,476
Try heading a ball back in the 60's! As a kid I instinctively knew that heading a ball was a stupid thing to do and played successfully as a goalscorer without hardly ever heading the ball. We even used to have some training of heading tennis, which I ducked out of.

I am not sure why fifty years later people are only starting to realise repeatedly heading a ball might be bad for you

My grandfather played top flight football in the 50s and he suffered dementia in his final years.
I don't think anyone in the family blames it on heading the ball or his career
 

Lemon

End World Debt
Jul 17, 2014
2,436
4,664
Lecithin and neuroplasticity, I'm sure the elite Spurs scientists have it covered (raised-eyebrow-emojithing).
 
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