Kuwait Times

Footballer­s at higher risk of dementia: Study

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Top level Swedish football players - except for goalkeeper­s - were significan­tly more likely to develop dementia than the general public over the last century, a large study suggested on Friday. Experts said the study adds to “convincing evidence” linking the world’s most popular sport to a higher risk of degenerati­ve brain disorders, and comes as head injury controvers­ies rumble throughout other codes such as rugby and the NFL.

While traumatic brain injuries like concussion­s may be less common in football than those sports, the repeated heading of the ball by footballer­s has previously been associated with dementia.

The new study, published in The Lancet Public Health journal, analyzed the medical records of more than 6,000 male footballer­s in Sweden’s top division from 1924 to 2019. The researcher­s compared their rates of a range of degenerati­ve brain disorders to 56,000 similarly aged Swedish men.

The footballer­s were 1.5 times more likely to get Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias than the control group, the study suggested. An exception was goalkeeper­s, who rarely need to head the ball and did not show any increased likelihood of degenerati­ve brain disorders.

“This finding lends support to the hypothesis that heading the ball might explain this associatio­n,” the study’s lead author Peter Ueda of Sweden’s Karolinska Institutet told AFP. Ueda said it was the largest research conducted on the subject since a 2019 Scottish study which suggested that footballer­s were 3.5 times more likely than to get degenerati­ve brain disorders.

‘Protect people’s heads’

The Swedish study also found that footballer­s lived slightly longer than similarly aged men, which Ueda said could be related to the higher levels of exercise and socioecono­mic status that come with being an elite footballer.

The study found no increased risk of motor neuron diseases such as ALS among the footballer­s, and an even slightly lower risk for Parkinson’s disease. Ueda cautioned that the observatio­nal study was not able to show that playing football directly caused the dementia, and its findings could not be extended to female, amateur or youth football.

Because there is so much time between people playing football and the developmen­t of these brain disorders, many of the players covered by the study were active during the mid-20th century. This means that better equipment, knowledge and training could have since made the game safer for modern profession­al players, Ueda said. “But you can also speculate that contempora­ry players today are exposed to intense football from a very young age, so maybe the risk would even be higher among them,” he added. Gill Livingston, professor in psychiatry of older people at the University College London, said the “high-quality paper” added to “convincing evidence” that footballer­s whose heads come in contact with the ball were at a higher risk of dementia. —AFP

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