Self-reported concussion history is not related to cortical volume in college athletes
Douglas H Schultz, Heather C Bouchard, Michelle C Barbot, Julia M Laing-Young, Amanda Chiao, Kate L Higgins, Cary R Savage, Maital Neta, Monika Błaszczyszyn, Monika Błaszczyszyn, Monika Błaszczyszyn

TL;DR
This study found no link between self-reported concussion history and changes in brain cortical volume among college athletes.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence that cortical volume remains stable despite concussion history or acute concussion effects in young athletes.
Findings
Concussion history was not related to cortical volume at the network or region level.
No consistent differences in cognitive performance were found between athletes with and without concussion history.
Cortical volume in the visual and dorsal attention networks was linked to cognitive performance.
Abstract
The long-term consequences of concussion are still being uncovered but have been linked to disruptions in cognition and psychological well-being. Previous studies focusing on the association between concussion history and structural changes in the brain have reported inconsistent results. We sought to examine the effect of concussion history on cortical volume with a focus on functional networks. These networks are associated with many of the functions that can be disrupted in those with an extensive concussion history. We collected baseline behavioral data including the Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing, a self-report measure of the number of diagnosed concussions, and structural MRI in college athletes (n=296; 263 men and 33 women, age range 17-24). Behavioral measures were collected by members of the Department of Athletics concussion management team using a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTraumatic Brain Injury Research · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies
