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Journal Article

Citation

Ashton J, Coyles G, Malone JJ, Roberts JW. Sci. Med. Footb. 2021; 5(3): 181-187.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/24733938.2020.1846769

PMID

35077295

Abstract

PURPOSE: There isgrowing concern surrounding the harmful effects of soccer heading on cognitive function. The present study aims to examine the immediate effects of heading.

METHODS: 30 recreational male soccer players were divided into three groups that undertook 20 consecutive headers with a soft (8.8 psi), hard (16.2 psi), or no (control) ball. A battery of neuropsychological tests was completed before and after heading: King-Devick, trail-making (TM) (A, B), digit span (DS) and spatial span (SS) (forward, backward).

RESULTS: Significant increase in the time (M = 4.44 s) and errors (M = 1.45) for the King-Devick test within the hard and soft groups, although there was no significant difference for TM-A and TM-B. Significant decline for SS forward within the hard and soft groups (M= -16%), although the declines for SS backward (M = -16%), DS forward (M= -23%) and DS backward (M = -25%) were present only for the hard group (ps <.05).

DISCUSSION: While outside of regular match-play, this study showed that heading negatively influenced one indicator of a suspected concussion (King-Devick), as well as working memory (DS, SS) that is essential for daily life. These findings contribute to the growing debate surrounding heading safety.


Language: en

Keywords

concussion; cognitive function; working memory; Head impact

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