PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study examines concussion, cognition, brain changes in retired NFL players

2015-05-18
(Press-News.org) A preliminary study of retired National Football League (NFL) players suggests that history of concussion with loss of consciousness may be a risk factor for increased brain atrophy in the area involved with memory storage and impaired memory performance later in life, according to an article published online by JAMA Neurology.

While most individuals recover completely from concussion within days or weeks, the potential association of concussion and the subsequent development of memory dysfunction with brain atrophy later in life remains poorly understood, according to the study background.

Munro Cullum, Ph.D., a neuropsychologist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, and coauthors examined the relationship of memory performance with hippocampal volume and with the influence of concussion history in retired NFL athletes with and without mild cognitive impairment (MCI).

The authors recruited retired NFL athletes living in Texas to build a sample of 28 former athletes, eight of whom were diagnosed as having MCI and had a history of concussion. The study also included 21 cognitively healthy control group participants with no history of concussion or past football experience and an additional six control participants with MCI but without history of concussion. Of the 28 retired football players, 17 had reported a grade 3 (G3) concussion with loss of consciousness.

The study found that former athletes with concussion history but without MCI had normal but lower scores on a test of verbal memory compared with control participants, while athletes with a concussion history and MCI performed worse compared with both control participants and athletes without memory impairment. There was no difference in scores between control participants with MCI and athletes with MCI on the test.

Former athletes without a concussion and loss of consciousness showed similar hippocampal volumes compared with control participants across age ranges. However, older retired athletes with at least one concussion with loss of consciousness had smaller hippocampal volumes compared with control subjects and a smaller right hippocampal volume compared with athletes without a G3 concussion. The left hippocampal volume in retired athletes with MCI and concussion also was smaller compared with control participants with MCI.

All of the retired athletes older than 63 years of age with a history of G3 concussion (7 of 7) were diagnosed with MCI and only one former athlete was diagnosed as having MCI but did not have a concussion with loss of consciousness (1 of 5), according to the results. Also, there was no relationship found between the number of games played and MCI, the study reports.

"Our findings suggest that a remote history of concussion with loss of consciousness is associated with both later-in-life decreases in hippocampal volume and memory performance in retired NFL players. ... Our findings further show that a history of G3 concussion in athletes with MCI was associated with greater hippocampal volume loss compared with control participants with MCI. Prospective longitudinal studies after a G3 concussion would add further insight to the mechanism of MCI development in these populations," the study concludes.

INFORMATION:

(JAMA Neurology. Published online May 18, 2015. doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2015.0206. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com.)

Editor's Note: This project was supported by the BrainHealth Institute for Athletes at the Center for BrainHealth, a research center at the University of Texas at Dallas, and a grant from the National Institute on Aging. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.

Media Advisory: To contact corresponding author Munro Cullum, Ph.D., call Gregg Shields at 214-648-9354 or email Gregg.Shields@utsouthwestern.edu.

To place an electronic embedded link in your story: Links will be live at the embargo time: http://archneur.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?doi=10.1001/jamaneurol.2015.0206



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

NYU researchers ID part of the brain for processing speech

2015-05-18
A team of New York University neuroscientists has identified a part of the brain exclusively devoted to processing speech. Its findings point to the superior temporal sulcus (STS), located in the temporal lobe, and help settle a long-standing debate about role-specific neurological functions. "We now know there is at least one part of the brain that specializes in the processing of speech and doesn't have a role in handling other sounds," explains David Poeppel, the paper's senior author, a professor in NYU's Department of Psychology and Center for Neural Science. The ...

Study: Many people in emergency department for chest pain don't to be need admitted

2015-05-18
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Chest pain is a scary symptom that sends more than 7 million Americans to the emergency department each year. About half of them are admitted to the hospital for further observation, testing or treatment. Now, emergency medicine physicians at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and Mount Carmel Health System believe that number can be significantly reduced. Their study, published in today's JAMA Internal Medicine, finds a very low short-term risk for life-threatening cardiac events among patients with chest pain who have normal cardiac blood ...

Microchip captures clusters of circulating tumor cells -- NIH study

Microchip captures clusters of circulating tumor cells -- NIH study
2015-05-18
Researchers have developed a microfluidic chip that can capture rare clusters of circulating tumor cells, which could yield important new insights into how cancer spreads. The work was funded by the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB), part of the National Institutes of Health. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are cells that break away from a tumor and move through a cancer patient's bloodstream. Single CTCs are extremely rare, typically fewer than 1 in 1 billion cells. These cells can take up residence in distant organs, and researchers ...

US West's power grid must be prepared for impacts of climate change

2015-05-18
TEMPE, Arizona -- Electricity generation and distribution infrastructure in the Western United States must be "climate-proofed" to diminish the risk of future power shortages, according to research by two Arizona State University engineers. Expected increases in extreme heat and drought events will bring changes in precipitation, air and water temperatures, air density and humidity, write Matthew Bartos and Mikhail Chester in the current issue of the research journal Nature Climate Change. The authors say the changing conditions could significantly constrain the energy ...

Suicide trends in school-aged children reveal racial disparity

2015-05-18
Suicide is a leading cause of death among children younger than 12 years. Suicide rates in this age group have remained steady overall for the past 20 years, but a study published today in JAMA Pediatrics from The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital is the first national study to observe higher suicide rates among black children compared to white children. "Little is known about the epidemiology of suicide in this age group," said Jeff Bridge, PhD, lead researcher of the study and principal investigator at the Center for Innovation in Pediatric Practice ...

UCSF-led study explains how early childhood vaccination reduces leukemia risk

2015-05-18
A team led by UCSF researchers has discovered how a commonly administered vaccine protects against acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), the most common type of childhood cancer. The Haemophilus influenzae Type b (Hib) vaccine not only prevents ear infections and meningitis caused by the Hib bacterium, but also protects against ALL, which accounts for approximately 25 percent of cancer diagnoses among children younger than 15 years, according to the National Cancer Society. The Hib vaccine is part of the standard vaccination schedule recommended by the Centers for Disease ...

Researchers make progress engineering digestive system tissues

2015-05-18
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - May 18, 2015 - New proof-of-concept research at Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine suggests the potential for engineering replacement intestine tissue in the lab, a treatment that could be applied to infants born with a short bowel and adults having large pieces of gut removed due to cancer or inflammatory bowel disease. Lead researcher Khalil N Bitar, Ph.D., a professor at the institute, which is part of Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, reported the results this week at Digestive Diseases Week in Washington, D.C. He also updated ...

Novel insights in MET-proto-oncogene might lead to optimizing cancer treatment

2015-05-18
The MET-proto-oncogene is involved in the pathogenesis of several tumors and therefore represents an interesting target for future therapies currently tested in dozens of clinical trials. Veronica Finisguerra, Andrea Casazza, Max Mazzone and colleagues from VIB, KU Leuven and UZ Leuven now reveal that MET is needed for the recruitment of anti-tumoral neutrophils and puts a mechanism into action that promotes the killing of cancer cells. This means that the efficacy of a cancer therapy targeting MET in cancer cells will partly be countered by the pro-tumoral effect arising ...

Beyond the poppy: A new method of opium production

2015-05-18
Moonshiners and home-brewers have long used yeast to convert sugar into alcohol. New research shows that those methods could also be adapted for something with more significant ramifications: the production of drugs including opiates, antibiotics, and anti-cancer therapeutics. According to new studies by researchers from Concordia University in Montreal and the University of California, Berkeley, yeast can be engineered to convert sugar to alkaloids -- plant-derived compounds such as codeine and morphine, naturally produced in the opium poppy. Collaborating on synthesis ...

Study highlights ways to boost weather and climate predictions

2015-05-18
Long range weather forecasts and climate change projections could be significantly boosted by advances in our understanding of the relationship between layers of the Earth's atmosphere -- the stratosphere and troposphere. A team of UK scientists have studied how a circulation changes in the stratosphere (above 10 km) can influence both weather and climate conditions on the surface of the Earth. The experts, who include Professor Mark Baldwin from the University of Exeter, argue that the predictability and persistence of stratospheric events could help scientists enhance ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Devastation of island land snails, especially in the Pacific

Microwaves help turn sugar industry waste into high-performance biochar

From craft dust to green gold: Turning palm handicraft waste into high value bio based chemicals

New roadmap shows how to turn farm nitrogen models into real world water quality gains

Heart damage is common after an operation and often goes unnoticed, but patients who see a cardiologist may be less likely to die or suffer heart disease as a result

New tool exposes scale of fake research flooding cancer science

Researchers identify new blood markers that may detect early pancreatic cancer

Scientists uncover why some brain cells resist Alzheimer's disease

The Lancet: AI-supported mammography screening results in fewer aggressive and advanced breast cancers, finds full results from first randomized controlled trial

New AI tool improves treatment of cancer patients after heart attack

Kandahar University highlights global disparities in neurosurgical workforce and access to care

Research spotlight: Discovering risk factors for long-term relapse in alcohol use disorder

As fossil fuel use declines, experts urge planning and coordination to prevent chaotic collapse

Scientists identify the antibody's hinge as a structural "control hub"

Late-breaking study establishes new risk model for surgery after TAVR

To reduce CO2 emissions, policy on carbon pricing, taxation and investment in renewable energy is key

Kissing the sun: Unraveling mysteries of the solar wind

Breathing new life into nanotubes for a cooler planet

Machine learning reveals how to maximize biochar yield from algae

Inconsistent standards may be undermining global tracking of antibiotic resistance

Helping hands: UBCO research team develops brace to reduce tremors

MXene nanomaterials enter a new dimension

Hippocampus does more than store memories: it predicts rewards, study finds

New light-based nanotechnology could enable more precise, less harmful cancer treatment

The heritability of human lifespan is roughly 50%, once external mortality is addressed

Tracking Finland’s ice fishers reveals how social information guides foraging decisions

DNA-protein crosslinks promote inflammation-linked premature aging and embryonic lethality in mice

Accounting for fossil energy’s “minimum viable scale” is central to decarbonization

Immunotherapy reduces plaque in arteries of mice

Using AI to retrace the evolution of genetic control elements in the brain

[Press-News.org] Study examines concussion, cognition, brain changes in retired NFL players