New Study Finds Hits, Not Concussions, Cause CTE

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ErikMagraken

Posting Machine
Apr 9, 2015
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2,553
Original article here.
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A recent study has been published confirming what appears to be increasingly clearer – CTE is a disease of mileage.

The study, titled Concussion, microvascular injury, and early taupathy in young athletes after impact head injury and impact concussion mouse model, was published in Brain, a Journal of Neurology. The full study can be found here.

The authors accessed post mortem brains of teenagers who died and had a history of head trauma. They were able to detect the early stages of the neurodegenerative disease CTE. They then”developed a mouse model of lateral closed-head impact injury that uses momentum transfer to induce traumatic head acceleration“. The results indicated “that closed-head impact injuries, independent of concussive signs, can induce traumatic brain injury as well as early pathologies and functional sequelae associated with chronic traumatic encephalopathy“. In other words, a series of sub concussive blows could lead to CTE even absent concussion.

CTE appears to be a disease of mileage. Just as doctors don’t know how many cigarettes you can smoke before developing lung cancer no one can say for certain how many blows to the head a person can take before developing CTE. Clearly the fewer the better.

The full abstract reads as follows:

Abstract
The mechanisms underpinning concussion, traumatic brain injury, and chronic traumatic encephalopathy, and the relationships between these disorders, are poorly understood. We examined post-mortem brains from teenage athletes in the acute-subacute period after mild closed-head impact injury and found astrocytosis, myelinated axonopathy, microvascular injury, perivascular neuroinflammation, and phosphorylated tau protein pathology. To investigate causal mechanisms, we developed a mouse model of lateral closed-head impact injury that uses momentum transfer to induce traumatic head acceleration. Unanaesthetized mice subjected to unilateral impact exhibited abrupt onset, transient course, and rapid resolution of a concussion-like syndrome characterized by altered arousal, contralateral hemiparesis, truncal ataxia, locomotor and balance impairments, and neurobehavioural deficits. Experimental impact injury was associated with axonopathy, blood–brain barrier disruption, astrocytosis, microgliosis (with activation of triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells, TREM2), monocyte infiltration, and phosphorylated tauopathy in cerebral cortex ipsilateral and subjacent to impact. Phosphorylated tauopathy was detected in ipsilateral axons by 24 h, bilateral axons and soma by 2 weeks, and distant cortex bilaterally at 5.5 months post-injury. Impact pathologies co-localized with serum albumin extravasation in the brain that was diagnostically detectable in living mice by dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI. These pathologies were also accompanied by early, persistent, and bilateral impairment in axonal conduction velocity in the hippocampus and defective long-term potentiation of synaptic neurotransmission in the medial prefrontal cortex, brain regions distant from acute brain injury. Surprisingly, acute neurobehavioural deficits at the time of injury did not correlate with blood–brain barrier disruption, microgliosis, neuroinflammation, phosphorylated tauopathy, or electrophysiological dysfunction. Furthermore, concussion-like deficits were observed after impact injury, but not after blast exposure under experimental conditions matched for head kinematics. Computational modelling showed that impact injury generated focal point loading on the head and seven-fold greater peak shear stress in the brain compared to blast exposure. Moreover, intracerebral shear stress peaked before onset of gross head motion. By comparison, blast induced distributed force loading on the head and diffuse, lower magnitude shear stress in the brain. We conclude that force loading mechanics at the time of injury shape acute neurobehavioural responses, structural brain damage, and neuropathological sequelae triggered by neurotrauma. These results indicate that closed-head impact injuries, independent of concussive signs, can induce traumatic brain injury as well as early pathologies and functional sequelae associated with chronic traumatic encephalopathy. These results also shed light on the origins of concussion and relationship to traumatic brain injury and its aftermath.
 

ender852

TMMAC Addict
Jan 31, 2015
9,854
7,715
They've been saying that for a while, the reason why a lot of folks frown upon wearing headgear in training.
 

Ted Williams' head

It's freezing in here!
Sep 23, 2015
11,283
19,071
Yeah they've been talking about the effects of sub concussive blows for years, it's not really new information.

Kind of a click-baity title. CTE is a mileage, but concussions also add to the mileage so it's weird to say "not concussions", when more appropriate to say "hits also".
 

ErikMagraken

Posting Machine
Apr 9, 2015
778
2,553
The 'click baity' title takes language directly from the authors who penned the study. They found early stages of CTE in teenagers who died with history of recent head trauma. They were able to replicate the damage in mice through controlled studies. Linking CTE to sub-concussive blows even absent concussive blows has been strongly hypothesized for years and this helps reinforce what is known.
 

nuraknu

savage
Jul 20, 2016
6,247
10,755
I think it's important to have scientific studies back up hypotheses, but I wish there were a way to do it without hurting mice. (I know, there really isn't right now.)
 

Onetrickpony

Stay gold
Nov 21, 2016
14,041
32,288
I think it's important to have scientific studies back up hypotheses, but I wish there were a way to do it without hurting mice. (I know, there really isn't right now.)
At the very least they should put it on ppv so the mice can make a decent living.



 
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Dashabox

Fi fie fo fum
Dec 7, 2017
1,120
1,603
I wonder what kind of effect this will have on combative sports. Do you guys think the amount of rounds sparring in camps will diminish going forward?
 

nuraknu

savage
Jul 20, 2016
6,247
10,755
I wonder what kind of effect this will have on combative sports. Do you guys think the amount of rounds sparring in camps will diminish going forward?
I think sparring rounds have already started to decline. There has been some talk about that already.
 

Dashabox

Fi fie fo fum
Dec 7, 2017
1,120
1,603
I think sparring rounds have already started to decline. There has been some talk about that already.
Yeah I know some camps have dialed back, obviously the chute boxe style of sparring rarely happens like it used to but as more of these findings come out and it potentially becomes accepted that any strikes to the head add up to CTE I wonder if all full contact sparring will end. I just wonder how that will affect the quality of the fighters moving forward. Or perhaps some will still continue to train the same way, accepting the potential repercussions and end up dominating.

I think things will remain the same for the foreseeable future.