4.2 Article

Association of Retrospectively Reported Concussion Symptoms with Objective Cognitive Performance in Former American-Style Football Players

Journal

ARCHIVES OF CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/arclin/acad008

Keywords

Head injury; traumatic brain injury; Executive functions; Attention; Learning and memory; Assessment

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This cross-sectional study examined the association between football exposure and later life cognitive performance in former professional American-style football players. It found that retrospectively reported football concussion symptoms were associated with cognitive performance in later life. However, this association may differ based on pre-concussion cognitive functioning.
Objective Sustaining concussions has been linked to health issues later in life, yet evidence for associations between contact sports exposure and long-term cognitive performance is mixed. This cross-sectional study of former professional American-style football players tested the association of several measures of football exposure with later life cognitive performance, while also comparing the cognitive performance of former players to nonplayers. Methods In total, 353 former professional football players (M-age = 54.3) completed both (1) an online cognitive test battery measuring objective cognitive performance and (2) a survey querying demographic information, current health conditions, and measures of past football exposure, including recollected concussion symptoms playing professional football, diagnosed concussions, years of professional play, and age of first football exposure. Testing occurred an average of 29 years after former players' final season of professional play. In addition, a comparison sample of 5,086 male participants (nonplayers) completed one or more cognitive tests. Results Former players' cognitive performance was associated with retrospectively reported football concussion symptoms (r(p) = -0.19, 95% CI -0.09 to -0.29; p < 0.001), but not with diagnosed concussions, years of professional play, or age of first football exposure. This association could be due to differences in pre-concussion cognitive functioning, however, which could not be estimated based on available data. Conclusions Future investigations of the long-term outcomes of contact sports exposure should include measures of sports-related concussion symptoms, which were more sensitive to objective cognitive performance than other football exposure measures, including self-reported diagnosed concussions.

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