Although football gets all the bad press, it's not the cause of most concussions in the United States. Horseback riding is.
In its April edition, the journal Neurosurgical Focus reported that horseback-riding accidents were the chief cause of emergency-room visits for sports-related traumatic brain injuries.
Researchers analyzed ER visits between 2003 and 2012
in six categories: contact sports (such as football or soccer), roller
sports, skiing/snowboarding, equestrian sports and aquatic sports.
While traumatic-brain injury was deemed mild in 86 percent of all cases, equestrians accounted for 45.2 percent of cases.
Next was interpersonal contact sports, with 20.3
percent; roller sports, 19 percent; skiing and snowboarding, 12 percent;
and aquatic sports, 3.5 percent.
Traumatic-brain injury, or TBI, is a change in brain
function because of a blow to the head. Its mildest form, which occurs
in 70 to 90 percent of cases, is called a concussion.
Research has found that repeat concussions can be
dangerous and even deadly, and may over time lead to chronic traumatic
encephalopathy, or CTE. The story of how CTE was discovered among
National Football League players was the subject of the 2015 film "Concussion" starring Will Smith.
"Brain injuries in professional athletes, however,
represent only a small fraction of the overall incidence of TBI
annually; the vast majority of these injuries occur in recreational
athletes," the researchers said.
Young adults, in particular, appear to be especially
at risk. People between the ages of 18 and 29 contributed
disproportionately to the total of sports-related TBIs, accounting for
44 percent of all injuries, the report said.
Ironically, although aquatic sports caused the fewest
injuries in the study, they accounted for the most complications and
fatalities, most from jumping or diving into a pool.
Among cases that ended in death, roller sports were the second most deadly.
The researchers said the findings make clear the
importance of educating recreational athletes about traumatic-brain
injury and how helmets can help prevent it, especially in equestrian
activities.
"One report found that, when normalized for hours of
activity, horseback riding results in a higher rate of hospital
admission than other high-risk activities such as motorcycle riding,"
the researchers said.
But they noted, "Rates of helmet use are 25 percent or lower across equestrian sports, despite the fact that helmets have been associated with as much as a 40-50 percent reduction in absolute risk for TBI."
The growing body of research on concussions has also shown the importance of rest
after even a mild head injury. A study published in February showed
that the brains of mice regrew damaged synapses after a week's rest, but
not if they were injured every day, Ike Swetlitz reported in STAT.Source-deseretnews
0 comments:
Post a Comment