The Scotsman

Call for brain injury research funding

● Scots academics behind landmark study say more work is required

- By MARTYN MCLAUGHLIN

A team of Scottish experts behind a landmark study into the risks posed by heading footballs have called for more funding to provide “definitive answers”.

Researcher­s at the University of Stirling say advances in neuroscien­ce are opening up new areas of exploratio­n into the health risks faced by footballer­s but stress that such work requires a “robust” funding commitment.

Staff at the university played a key role in a BBC investigat­ion, presented by former England internatio­nal footballer, Alan Shearer, into the issue.

The programme – Alan Shearer: Dementia, Football and Me – included footage of Shearer undergoing tests in a lab at Stirling, where academics have, for the first time, found direct evidence of brain changes immediatel­y after heading a ball.

The Football Associatio­n and Profession­al Footballer­s Associatio­n have commission­ed research into whether the degenerati­ve neurocogni­tive disease is more common in ex-profession­al footballer­s than the rest of the population.

While the team at Stirling – cognitive neuroscien­tist, Dr Magdalena Ietswaart, and Dr Angus Hunter, reader in exercise physiology – have welcomed this research, they said more funding was essential to make progress.

Dr Ietswaart said: “We do not yet know whether there is a definitive link between football and dementia. This can only be discovered by carrying out research in this area.

“Scientific developmen­ts open up a new approach that is achievable but requires a robust funding drive. If you want real answers, you need to understand what is happening in the brain; what is cause and effect, the approach we use here at Stirling.”

As part of the BBC programme, which aired last night, Shearer visited Stirling and underwent tests that showed immediate brain changes after heading the ball – the same changes observed in participan­ts who took part in the landmark study.

The research, published in Ebiomedici­ne, is the first to show direct evidence for short-term sub-concussive changes in the brain follow- ing any sport-related impact. After meeting the Stirling team, Shearer said: “Football should be encouragin­g these universiti­es to do as much research as possible but, like everything else, these universiti­es need funding.

“There’s enough money around nowadays in football but not enough of it is being given to research. It is about time we had more definitive answers.”

Dr Hunter said the findings of the Stirling study should “provide the stimulus” for further scientific research to be carried out.

 ??  ?? 0 Former England internatio­nal Alan Shearer,underwent tests at the University of Stirling as part of the BBC investigat­ion into brain injuries.
0 Former England internatio­nal Alan Shearer,underwent tests at the University of Stirling as part of the BBC investigat­ion into brain injuries.

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