Blood and MRI biomarkers of mild Traumatic Brain Injury in non-concussed collegiate football players

Author:

Cho Eunhan1,Granger Joshua1,Bailey Theall1,Nathan Lemoine2,Calvert Derek2,Marucci Jack2,Mullenix Shelly2,O'Neal Hollis3,Jacome Tomas3,Irving Brian3,Johannsen Neil M.4,Carmichael Owen4,Spielmann Guillaume1

Affiliation:

1. Louisiana State University

2. LSU Athletics, LSU

3. Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center

4. Pennington Biomedical Research Center

Abstract

Abstract Football has one of the highest incidence rates of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) among contact sports; however, the effects of repeated sub-concussive head impacts on brain structure and function remain under-studied. We assessed the association between biomarkers of mTBI and structural and functional MRI scans over an entire season among non-concussed NCAA Division I linemen and non-linemen. Concentrations of S100B, GFAP, BDNF, NFL, and NSE were assessed in 48 collegiate football players (32 linemen; 16 non-linemen) before the start of pre-season training (pre-camp), at the end of pre-season training (pre-season), and at the end of the competitive season (post-season). Changes in brain structure and function were assessed in a sub-sample of 17 players using structural and functional MRI during the execution of Stroop and attention network tasks. S100B, GFAP and BDNF concentrations were increased at post-season compared to pre-camp in linemen. White matter hyperintensities increased in linemen during pre-season camp training compared to pre-camp. This study showed that the effects of repeated head impacts are detectable in the blood of elite level non-concussed collegiate football players exposed to low-moderate impacts to the heads, which correlated with some neurological outcomes without translating to clinically-relevant changes in brain anatomy or function.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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3. Cumulative effects associated with recurrent concussion in collegiate football players: the NCAA Concussion Study;Guskiewicz KM;Jama,2003

4. Frequency of head-impact–related outcomes by position in NCAA division I collegiate football players;Baugh CM;Journal of Neurotrauma,2015

5. Potential blood-based biomarkers for concussion;Papa L;Sports medicine and arthroscopy review,2016

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