Impact of repeated sportive chokes on carotid intima media thickness and brain injury biomarkers in grappling athletes.

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q2 ORTHOPEDICS Physician and Sportsmedicine Pub Date : 2024-06-14 DOI:10.1080/00913847.2024.2366154
Samuel J Stellpflug, Kirsten A Dalrymple, Daniel Stone, Samuel Southgate, David S Bachman, Robert C LeFevere, Jaan Hasan, Michael D Zwank
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Abstract

Purpose: Vascular neck compression techniques, referred to as 'chokes' in combat sports, reduce cerebral perfusion, causing loss of consciousness or voluntary submission by the choked athlete. Despite these chokes happening millions of times yearly around the world, there is scant research on their long-term effects. This pilot study evaluated whether repeated choking in submission grappling impacts the carotid intima media thickness (CIMT) and brain injury biomarkers (NFL, hGFAP, t-Tau, and UCH-L1).

Methods: Participants (n = 39, 29 male; ages 27-60 years) were assigned to one of two study arms: Grapplers (n = 20, 15 male) and 19 age/sex/body size matched controls. Grapplers had been exposed to >500 choke events while training for >5 years in a choke-inclusive sport. Exclusion criteria were recent TBI or deficits from a past TBI or stroke. Bilateral ultrasound measurement of the CIMT was performed, and blood was collected for quantitative analysis of four brain injury markers. Subgroup analyses were performed within the Grappler group to account for blunt head trauma as a possible confounder.

Results: There was no overall difference in CIMT measurements between Grapplers (mean 0.55 mm, SD 0.07) and Controls (mean 0.57 mm, SD 0.10) p = 0.498 [95% CI -0.04-0.08], nor were there CIMT differences between Grappler subgroups of blunt Trauma and No-Trauma. There were no significant differences in any biomarkers comparing Grapplers and Controls or comparing Grappler subgroups of Trauma and No-Trauma.

Conclusion: This study found no significant difference in CIMT and serum brain injury biomarkers between controls and grapplers with extensive transient choke experience, nor between grapplers with extensive past blunt head trauma and those without.

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反复运动窒息对擒拿运动员颈动脉内膜厚度和脑损伤生物标志物的影响
目的:搏击运动中被称为 "窒息 "的颈部血管压迫技术会降低脑灌注,导致被窒息的运动员失去知觉或自愿屈服。尽管这种窒息每年在世界各地发生数百万次,但有关其长期影响的研究却很少。这项试验性研究评估了擒拿格斗中的反复窒息是否会影响颈动脉内膜厚度(CIMT)和脑损伤生物标志物(NFL、hGFAP、t-Tau、UCH-L1):参与者(n = 39,29 名男性;年龄 27-60 岁)被分配到两个研究组中的一个:擒拿手(20 人,15 名男性)和 19 名年龄/性别/体型匹配的对照组。擒拿运动员在进行擒拿运动训练的 5 年以上时间里,曾接触过 500 次以上的窒息事件。排除标准为近期发生过创伤性脑损伤或因过去的创伤性脑损伤或中风导致的功能障碍。对 CIMT 进行双侧超声波测量,并采集血液对四种脑损伤标志物进行定量分析。在Grappler组中进行了分组分析,以考虑钝性头部外伤可能造成的混淆因素:结果:擒拿运动员(平均 0.55 mm,SD 0.07)和对照组(平均 0.57 mm,SD 0.10)之间的 CIMT 测量值没有总体差异,P = 0.498,[95 CI -0.04 - 0.08],钝性外伤和无外伤的擒拿运动员亚组之间也没有 CIMT 差异。擒拿运动员与对照组相比,或擒拿运动员的创伤亚组与非创伤亚组相比,任何生物标志物均无明显差异:本研究发现,对照组与有大量短暂窒息经历的擒拿运动员之间,以及有大量既往钝性头部创伤的擒拿运动员与无钝性头部创伤的擒拿运动员之间,在CIMT和血清脑损伤生物标志物方面没有明显差异。
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来源期刊
Physician and Sportsmedicine
Physician and Sportsmedicine PRIMARY HEALTH CARE-ORTHOPEDICS
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
4.30%
发文量
60
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Physician and Sportsmedicine is a peer-reviewed, clinically oriented publication for primary care physicians. We examine the latest drug discoveries to advance treatment and recovery, and take into account the medical aspects of exercise therapy for a given condition. We cover the latest primary care-focused treatments serving the needs of our active patient population, and assess the limits these treatments govern in stabilization and recovery. The Physician and Sportsmedicine is a peer-to-peer method of communicating the latest research to aid primary care physicians’ advancement in methods of care and treatment. We routinely cover such topics as: managing chronic disease, surgical techniques in preventing and managing injuries, the latest advancements in treatments for helping patients lose weight, and related exercise and nutrition topics that can impact the patient during recovery and modification.
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