The Chronicle (South Tyneside and Durham)

Elite players to help research

APPEAL TO FOOTBALL STARS TO AID STUDY INTO DEMENTIA

- By MIKE KELLY Reporter mike.kelly@reachplc.com

A LANDMARK study has been launched to investigat­e possible ways to to reduce dementia risk in former profession­al footballer­s. Researcher­s have launched an appeal for 120 ex-stars aged 40 to 59 to come forward as volunteers.

Over recent years there has been growing awareness of the condition among sports stars. A compelling documentar­y film, Finding Jack Charlton, was made about the Ashington-born defender’s fight with dementia before he died in 2020.

Jack’s fellow World Cup hero and brother Sir Bobby Charlton has also been diagnosed with the condition, as has Toon legend and England midfielder Terry Mcdermott.

The £1.3m study will last for four years and has been called BRAINHOPE which stands for Optimising Brain Health Outcomes in former Profession­al and Elite footballer­s.

It builds on the ground-breaking observatio­ns of the FIELD study, which found risk of dementia and related disorders among former profession­al footballer­s was around three and a half times higher than expected.

Led by the University of Glasgow, in collaborat­ion with the University of Edinburgh, Imperial College London and the wider PREVENT Dementia research collaborat­ors, it is jointly funded by the Football Associatio­n and FIFA.

They will use brain imaging and a range of tests to compare brain health in mid-life former footballer­s to general population control subjects

Brothers Jack and Bobby Charlton

already recruited to the PREVENT Dementia study. In addition, in a world’s first, researcher­s will explore whether any difference­s in brain health among footballer­s might benefit from management of known dementia risk factors designed to try and their reduce risk.

To do this, BRAINHOPE is looking to recruit the 120 former profession­al footballer­s from all over the

UK including the North East to compare against 700 general population controls. The effectiven­ess of Brain Health Clinic management will then be explored within the footballer subjects, with the brain scans and tests repeated again after two years.

Prof Willie Stewart, BRAINHOPE lead, consultant neuropatho­logist and Honorary Professor at the University of Glasgow, said: “Our findings from the FIELD study show there is reason to worry about lifelong brain health in former footballer­s. BRAINHOPE is designed to identify tests that might detect problems early on and, more importantl­y, possible ways to try and reduce dementia risk for former footballer­s.”

Charlotte Cowie, Head of Performanc­e Medicine at the FA, said: “The launch of the Brainhope study is another important step in building our understand­ing of the longterm health of former profession­al footballer­s. Forming part of the wider Prevent Dementia study, this research will help us further understand the links between the game and neurodegen­erative diseases and also potential early interventi­ons which could help reduce risk or speed of developing dementia.”

The 2019 FIELD study – led by Professor Willie Stewart, University of Glasgow – remains the largest study to date looking in detail at the risk of neurodegen­erative disease in any sport, not just profession­al footballer players. The study compared health records of 7,676 former Scottish male profession­al football players who were born between 1900 and 1976 against those of more than 23,000 matched individual­s from the general population.

In parallel work led by Prof Stewart, a specific pathology linked to brain injury exposure, known as chronic traumatic encephalop­athy (CTE), has been described in a high proportion of the brains of former contact sport athletes, including former amateur and profession­al footballer­s.

Former profession­al football players interested in taking part should contact https://preventdem­entia. co.uk/prevent-sports/

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