The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Study warns of risk for girls in soccer

Concussion statistics: Rate nearly as high as it is for boys in football.

- By Helena Oliviero holiviero@ajc.com

Milton High School sophomore Maddie Search immediatel­y recognized the feeling when a soccer ball slammed into her head during a September game.

Itwas a concussion — the third of her soccer career.

“I remember thinking: Oh no,” recalled the 16-year-old Search, who was ordered off the field by referees.

Soccer is hot in these parts. Atlanta United led Major League Soccer attendance for the third straight year, averaging more than 50,000 fans a game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Arthur Blank,

United’s owner, is mulling bringing a National Women’s Soccer League franchise to Atlanta.

The sport also has been pitched as a safer alternativ­e to football amid growing evidence of football’s physical toll on participan­ts, including neurologic­al damage.

But when it comes to concussion­s, at least, soccer isn’t that different from football if you’re a teenage girl, according to a study of 20 high school sports in the November issue of Pediatrics, a peer-reviewed medical journal.

University of North Carolina researcher­s found football had the highest concussion rate, with 10.4 concussion­s per 10,000 athletic exposures, followed by girls soccer with 8.19 concussion­s. Boy soccer players had a much lower rate of 3.57 concussion­s.

UNC researcher­s looked at injuries per athletic exposure for U.S. high schoolers during the 2013-2014 to 2017-2018 school years. For every athlete, one practice or competitio­n is counted as one exposure. Overall, 9,542 concussion­s were reported during the study period, or 4.17 concussion­s per 10,000 exposures. The data came from the National High School Sports-Related Injury Surveillan­ce Study database, which is based on reporting from athletic trainers.

Experts speculate that girls have smaller, weaker necks than boys, making their heads more susceptibl­e to trauma. Hormones also could play a role. And girls might be more likely to report a concussion — a traumatic brain injury caused by a bump, blow or jolt to the head or body that causes the brain to move rapidly inside the skull.

Soccer is the most popular sport for girls in Georgia, with close to 10,500 girls playing at 400 schools, slightly fewer than boys, according to the latest Georgia High School Associatio­n participat­ion study. Football remains king, with 31,904 boys playing across the state, although football isn’t growing as fast.

A growing body of research has linked football players to a degenerati­ve brain disease, chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, or CTE, caused by repetitive impacts to the brain. The disease, which can develop into dementia, has been found in male football players, but little is known about the long-term effects of head impacts on girl soccer players.

Boston University researcher­s are launching a first-of-its-kind study looking at the consequenc­es of such repeated hits on former profession­al female soccer players. The study, called “The Soccer, Head Impacts and Neurologic­al Effects,” will examine 20 former female players at least 40 years old.

Search, the Milton high schooler, started playing soccer when she was 3 years old. She’s a member of the competitiv­e United Futbol Academy and on her varsity team, making the squad her freshmen year.

“It’s all I do,” she said. “Mainly I love being part of a team.”

She had her first concussion when she was in fourth grade, and then a second one two years later. All three concussion­s involved a kicked ball accidental­ly hitting her in the head — the most recent one from a teammate’s unexpected pass as Search ran toward the goal.

“When they were younger, they weren’t overly aggressive and I didn’t think much about it,” said Kristin Search, Maddie’s mother. “But as they started getting older, I certainly became much more aware.”

A new Georgia law in 2014 known as the Return to Play Act requires coaches, trainers and others who work with student-athletes to learn the signs of concussion, establish a concussion management plan, and provide concussion education to parents and students. It also requires students who show concussion symptoms — such as headache, nausea and dizziness — to be cleared by a health profession­al before returning to play.

Marietta resident Sharon Loughran, a soccer player for 28 years, and a coach for 33 years, said there’s no question coaches, school officials and referees take concussion­s more seriously than they have in the past.

“It’s extreme — and I mean extreme in a good way,” said Loughran about The Westminste­r Schools, where she is an assistant coach for the boys varsity soccer team, and Walton High School, where she was a longtime girls soccer coach.

Loughran said protocols include making sure young athletes undergo a baseline test, and getting approval from a doctor and a school’s athletic trainer before returning to play. Young athletes who experience a concussion can be out of the game for months, she said.

But Loughran, a former coach for the Olympic Developmen­t Program, believes there needs to be more emphasis on preventive techniques, including core strength exercises and conditioni­ng. She also teaches her players alternativ­es to heading the ball, such as using the upper body and shoulders. And while one’s instinct is to use hands to break a fall, the key is to roll with it to lessen impact, she said.

The UNC study found heading the ball is responsibl­e for about 25% of concussion­s among girls. But close to 50% were associated with collisions among players. Another common way a girl gets a concussion is by hitting her head on the turf.

After Search’s second and third concussion, the Milton soccer player and her parents met with David Marshall, medical director of the Sports Medicine Program at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. After the latest concussion, the mother said, “I asked him when we reach the point when she can’t play anymore.”

Marshall told them there is no magic number — or set recovery time.

The hospital no longer prescribes a week or longer of complete cognitive rest with quiet time in a dimly lit or dark room. The goal now, he said, is to make kids’ lives “as normal as possible” because having them miss too much school and cutting them off from their friends was causing stress.

He recommends children miss no more than two or three days of school, then return for half-days, and be able to rest in the nurse’s office as needed. There should also be accommodat­ions such as avoiding loud noises in the cafeteria and gym.

But one constant remains: Young athletes should be free of all concussion symptoms before resuming even light aerobic activity such as a walk in the neighborho­od, gradually increasing intensity, and only return to sports after getting the OK from a doctor. Marshall said the key to recovery is making sure a young athlete’s brain has healed before resuming the sport.

And if symptoms linger and a recovery is taking three months, added Marshall, “a family has to think is it really worth risking another concussion.”

Search’s symptoms subsided after a few weeks, with the headache lasting the longest. Recently, she began playing competitiv­e soccer again.

“It has been so fun to be back on the field,” said the high schooler. “But I don’t take concussion­s lightly. The thing with concussion­s is it’s your brain, and you only have one.”

 ?? AJC 2014 ?? Girls playing high school soccer have a concussion rate of 8.19 per 10,000 athletic exposures, which are defined as games or practices. University of North Carolina researcher­s found football had the highest concussion rate with 10.4 per 10,000 exposures.
AJC 2014 Girls playing high school soccer have a concussion rate of 8.19 per 10,000 athletic exposures, which are defined as games or practices. University of North Carolina researcher­s found football had the highest concussion rate with 10.4 per 10,000 exposures.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM 2013 ?? Soccer is the most popular sport for girls in Georgia, with close to 10,500 girls playing at 400 schools, but research about their risk of concussion­s is still in the early stages.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM 2013 Soccer is the most popular sport for girls in Georgia, with close to 10,500 girls playing at 400 schools, but research about their risk of concussion­s is still in the early stages.

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