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

Soccer heading does most damage to brain area critical for cognition

2025-09-18
(Press-News.org) NEW YORK, NY (Sept. 18, 2025)--A brain imaging technique developed by Columbia researchers has identified areas in the brain’s cerebral cortex—just behind the forehead—that are most damaged by the repetitive impacts from heading a soccer ball. Their study also found that the damage leads to cognitive deficits seen in soccer players who head the ball frequently.  

The study, published Sept. 18 in JAMA Network Open, was conducted in amateur adult soccer players from New York City. 

“What’s important about our study is that it shows, really for the first time, that exposure to repeated head impacts causes specific changes in the brain that, in turn, impair cognitive function,” says study leader Michael Lipton, MD, PhD, professor of radiology and biomedical engineering at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. 

The study also gives researchers a brain imaging tool they need to detect these injuries in individuals, learn more about the ways repetitive head impacts affect the brain, and develop treatments. 

A second study from Lipton’s lab, in press in the journal Neurology, used a different imaging technique to look at the brain and found related damage in the same area.  

“The fact that both techniques, looking at two different features, find the same association strengthens our conclusion that these changes are mediating heading’s cognitive effects,” Lipton says. 

Finding signs of brain injury 

The researchers used a new imaging technique to look for biomarkers of injury due to heading in an area of the brain previously inaccessible to accurate imaging.  

Using diffusion MRI, a technique that examines cellular microstructure and organization, the researchers imaged the athletes’ brains to look at the interface between white and gray matter in the cerebral cortex, the outermost surface of the brain.  

“We looked at this interface because white and gray matter have different densities and move at different rates in response to head impact,” Lipton says. “That creates shear forces between the two types of tissue, leaving the interface between the two layers vulnerable to injury.” 

Typical dMRI techniques work well for analyzing structures deep inside the brain, but significant hurdles limit their ability to analyze the outer layers—the very areas that may be most susceptible to injury from heading. A graduate student in Lipton’s lab, Joan Song, developed a new method to characterize microstructure within the transition zones between gray and white matter in the brain’s outer surface. 

“In healthy individuals, there’s a sharp transition between these tissues,” Song says. “Here we studied if an attenuation of this transition may occur with minor impacts caused by heading.” 

What the study found 

Lipton’s team performed dMRI scans on 352 adult amateur soccer players, who reported varying levels of heading over the previous year, and on 77 aged-matched athletes not involved in collision sports. All players took simple learning and memory tests. 

The most fervent headers of the ball—reporting more than 1,000 headers each year—had significantly fuzzier transitions between gray and white matter in the orbitofrontal region but not in other regions further back in the brain. Players who most frequently headed the ball also performed a few points worse on tests of learning and memory compared to players who did little to no heading.  

Greater damage in the transition zone linked head impacts to worse test performance.

“It’s very strong evidence that these microstructural changes are likely to be a cause of cognitive deficits,” Lipton says. 

What’s next? 

The lab is now looking at the potential relationship between these biomarkers and the later development of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a neurodegenerative disease that has been diagnosed in athletes who experienced many head impacts over their playing careers. 

"The location of the abnormality we report is remarkably similar to CTE pathology, though we don't yet know if they are linked to CTE or if any of these currently healthy athletes will develop CTE." 

Lipton’s lab is also investigating if cardiovascular activity can help buffer the brain from damage caused by repetitive impacts. 

Additional information

“Orbitofrontal Gray-White Interface Injury Mediates Soccer Heading Association with Verbal Learning,” was published September 18 in JAMA Network Open

All authors: Joan Y. Song, (Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Columbia), Roman Fleysher (Columbia), Kenny Ye (Einstein), Mimi Kim (Einstein), Walter F. Stewart (Medcurio Inc.), Molly E. Zimmerman (Fordham University), Richard B. Lipton (Einstein), and Michael L. Lipton (Columbia). 

###

Columbia University Irving Medical Center (CUIMC) is a clinical, research, and educational campus located in New York City. Founded in 1928, CUIMC was one of the first academic medical centers established in the United States of America. CUIMC is home to four professional colleges and schools that provide global leadership in scientific research, health and medical education, and patient care including the Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, the Mailman School of Public Health, the College of Dental Medicine, the School of Nursing. For more information, please visit cuimc.columbia.edu. 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

US faces rising death toll from wildfire smoke, study finds

2025-09-18
Wildfires burning across Canada and the Western United States are spewing smoke over millions of Americans – the latest examples of ashy haze becoming a regular experience, with health impacts far greater than scientists previously estimated.  Although wildfires have long been part of life in the Western U.S., warmer, drier conditions are fueling bigger blazes that occur more often and for longer. Smoke from these blazes is spreading farther and lingering longer than in the past. In a Sept. 18 study in Nature, Stanford University researchers estimate that continued global warming could lead ...

Scenario projections of COVID-19 burden in the US, 2024-2025

2025-09-18
About The Study: In this decision analytical modeling study of COVID-19 burden in the U.S. in 2024 to 2025, ensemble projections suggested that although vaccinating high-risk groups had substantial benefits in reducing disease burden, maintaining the vaccine recommendation for all individuals had the potential to save thousands more lives. Despite divergence of projections from observed disease trends in 2024 to 2025—possibly driven by variant emergence patterns and immune escape—averted COVID-19 burden due to vaccination was robust across ...

Disparities by race and ethnicity in percutaneous coronary intervention

2025-09-18
About The Study: In this cross-sectional study examining racial and ethnic disparities in receipt of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) for patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), racial and ethnic disparities persisted throughout the care process. The largest magnitude of disparity was PCI receipt if transferred, but the disparity with the largest impact was PCI receipt when initially presenting to PCI-capable hospitals. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Charleen Hsuan, JD, PhD, email chsuan@psu.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For ...

Glioblastoma cells “unstick” from their neighbors to become more deadly

2025-09-18
Article Summary: Sylvester researchers used leading-edge technology to study glioblastoma tumors at unprecedented detail. Looking at the locations of individual tumor cell types allowed them to find that “dispersed” glioblastoma cells are more malleable and more aggressive than their “clustered” counterparts. Their findings, corroborated in breast cancer samples as well, point to a possible new general principle of solid tumor biology.  MIAMI, FLORIDA (EMBARGOED UNTIL SEPT. ...

Oral bacterial and fungal microbiome and subsequent risk for pancreatic cancer

2025-09-18
About The Study: In this cohort study, oral bacteria and fungi were significant risk factors for pancreatic cancer development. Oral microbiota hold promise as biomarkers to identify individuals at high risk of pancreatic cancer, potentially contributing to personalized prevention. Corresponding Authors: To contact the corresponding authors, email Jiyoung Ahn, PhD (jiyoung.ahn@nyulangone.org) and Richard B. Hayes, DDS, PhD (richard.b.hayes@nyulangone.org). To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamaoncol.2025.3377) Editor’s ...

New light on toxicity of Bluefin tuna

2025-09-18
Researchers at the ESRF - the European Synchrotron-, together with CNRS, ENS Lyon and the Institute of Marine Research in Norway, have unveiled how Atlantic Bluefin tuna transforms the toxic form of mercury into less harmful forms. Their study, published in Environmental Science & Technology, shows that the tuna’s edible muscle contains not only toxic methylmercury, but also mercury bound in stable, non-toxic compounds. Mercury contamination in seafood is a global health concern. Mercury (Hg) originates both from natural sources like volcanoes ...

Menopause drug reduces hot flashes by more than 70%, international clinical trial finds

2025-09-18
The investigational drug elinzanetant significantly reduces hot flashes and night sweats for post-menopausal women, a large, international clinical trial has found. The OASIS-3 trial enrolled more than 600 postmenopausal women, ages 40 to 65, at 83 sites in North America and Europe. Participants were given either 120 mg of elinzanetant or a harmless placebo daily for 52 weeks. Elinzanetant recipients saw a more than 73% reduction in the frequency and severity of “vasomotor symptoms” – hot ...

FGF21 muscle hormone associated with slow ALS progression and extended survival

2025-09-18
“[…]we have identified FGF21 as a novel biomarker in ALS that is detected in multiple compartments including muscle, spinal cord, and circulation.” BUFFALO, NY — September 18, 2025 — A new research paper was published  in Volume 17, Issue 8 of Aging-US on August 9, 2025, titled “The myokine FGF21 associates with enhanced survival in ALS and mitigates stress-induced cytotoxicity.” In this study, led by first author Abhishek Guha and corresponding author Peter H. King from the University ...

Hitting the right note: The healing power of music therapy in the cardiac ICU

2025-09-18
Music therapy could significantly reduce heart rate, blood pressure and patient–ventilator asynchronies for patients admitted to the cardiac intensive care unit (ICU), according to research being presented at ACC Latin America 2025 taking place September 18-20 in Mexico City. Music therapy is the use of music and its elements to reduce stress and improve quality of life. A music therapist uses music therapy as a non-pharmacological and non-invasive intervention to improve a patient's physical, social, communicative, emotional, intellectual, and spiritual ...

Cardiovascular disease risk rises in Mexico, despite improved cholesterol control

2025-09-18
Despite improved statin use and cholesterol control, cardiovascular disease risk rose in Mexico between 2016 and 2023, according to a study being presented at ACC Latin America 2025 that used region-specific tools to more accurately predict the local disease burden. Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the world, costing billions each year in care. Factors such as socioeconomics, demographics, hypertension, cholesterol, air pollution, obesity and more can play a role in the types of cardiovascular disease (CVD) burden a country or region may be most impacted by. Most models to predict cardiovascular disease risk use data ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Inspired by bacteria’s defense strategies

Research spotlight: Combination therapy shows promise for overcoming treatment resistance in glioblastoma

University of Houston co-leads $25 million NIH-funded grant to study the delay of nearsightedness in children

NRG Oncology PREDICT-RT study completes patient accrual, tests individualized concurrent therapy and radiation for high-risk prostate cancer

Taking aim at nearsightedness in kids before it’s diagnosed

With no prior training, dogs can infer how similar types of toys work, even when they don’t look alike

Three deadliest risk factors of a common liver disease identified in new study

Dogs can extend word meanings to new objects based on function, not appearance

Palaeontology: South American amber deposit ‘abuzz’ with ancient insects

Oral microbes linked to increased risk of pancreatic cancer

Soccer heading does most damage to brain area critical for cognition

US faces rising death toll from wildfire smoke, study finds

Scenario projections of COVID-19 burden in the US, 2024-2025

Disparities by race and ethnicity in percutaneous coronary intervention

Glioblastoma cells “unstick” from their neighbors to become more deadly

Oral bacterial and fungal microbiome and subsequent risk for pancreatic cancer

New light on toxicity of Bluefin tuna

Menopause drug reduces hot flashes by more than 70%, international clinical trial finds

FGF21 muscle hormone associated with slow ALS progression and extended survival

Hitting the right note: The healing power of music therapy in the cardiac ICU

Cardiovascular disease risk rises in Mexico, despite improved cholesterol control

Flexible optical touch sensor simultaneously pinpoints pressure strength and location

Achalasia diagnosis simplified to AI plus X-ray

PolyU scholars pioneer smart and sustainable personal cooling technologies to address global extreme heat

NIH grant aims for childhood vaccine against HIV

Menstrual cycle and long COVID: A relation confirmed

WMO report on global water resources: 2024 was characterized by both extreme drought and intense rainfall

New findings explain how a mutation in a cancer-related gen causes pulmonary fibrosis

Thermal trigger

SNU materials science and engineering team identifies reconstruction mechanism of copper alloy catalysts for CO₂ conversion

[Press-News.org] Soccer heading does most damage to brain area critical for cognition