A new study links soccer heading to structural brain abnormalities, raising concerns about long-term cognitive effects.
A STUDY presented at the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) meeting suggests that heading a soccer ball may cause ...
Researchers from the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) analyzed the brain MRIs of 352 amateur soccer players, aged ...
Heading a soccer ball can cause long-term damage to areas of the brain associated with learning, new research shows.
Romance scams—where scammers create fake identities and use dating or friendship to get your trust and money—cost Australians ...
A new US study into repeated head impacts for footballers comes amid a campaign to ban heading from the game in Scotland.
The researchers said most of the damage was found in the frontal lobe of the brain — beneath the part of the skull soccer ...
Soccer players who headed the ball at high levels showed abnormality of the brain's white matter adjacent to sulci, which are deep grooves in the brain's surface. Abnormalities in this region of the ...
Bouncing a soccer ball off the head during play could be doing real damage to the brain, a new study suggests. MRI brain ...
Previous studies have suggested a strong link between head impact in sports and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).
Here, the authors show that two FDA-approved drugs, leucovorin and dyclonine, identified through pharmacogenomic screening, promote oligodendrocyte formation and brain repair in myelin injury models.