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			 While amateur soccer players were at an increased risk of 
			concussion-like symptoms from colliding with each other and objects, 
			they also had an increased risk for those symptoms if they often 
			used their head to hit the ball - an action known as heading. 
 The new study can't say heading leads to brain damage or other 
			issues down the road, however.
 
 "There is enough here to say there may be risk," said senior author 
			Dr. Michael Lipton, a neuroradiologist and neuroscientist at the 
			Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Health System in 
			New York City.
 
 "We’re reporting on effects in the very short term," he told Reuters 
			Health. "These are really immediate symptoms. This paper does not 
			address the long term consequences."
 
 Soccer is the most popular sport in the world, Lipton and his 
			colleagues write in the journal Neurology. Recent research suggested 
			concussion-like symptoms among young soccer players were caused by 
			accidental collisions - not heading.
 
			
			 
			For the new study, the researchers recruited adult amateur soccer 
			players living around New York City to take part in a large study 
			known as the Einstein Soccer Study. Part of the study included 
			online surveys that asked how often the participants played soccer 
			over the past two weeks, how often they head the ball, if they took 
			any hits to the head and if they experienced any negative symptoms 
			like pain, dizziness and unconsciousness.
 Overall, 470 surveys were completed by 222 participants in 2013 and 
			2014. The participants were between ages 18 and 55, and about 80 
			percent were men.
 
 The researchers found that 37 percent of men reported accidental 
			hits to the head. Men headed the ball an average of 44 times during 
			a two week span. Women headed the ball an average of 27 times over 
			the same length of time, and 43 percent reported unintentional hits 
			to the head.
 
 About 20 percent of participants reported moderate to severe 
			concussion-like symptoms.
 
 Compared to those who reported the least amount of accidental hits 
			to the head, the participants who reported the most were about six 
			times more likely to experience symptoms.
 
			
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			After adjusting for accidental hits, the researchers found those who 
			were heading the ball the most were more than three times as likely 
			to experience those symptoms as those who reported doing it the 
			least. 
			"There is not enough information here to say that heading is 
			universally evil or causing people to be brain damaged," said 
			Lipton. Ultimately, he said, it would be good to know if heading 
			does lead to cognitive problems years later, and if that could 
			somehow be prevented.
 "I think what we need to try to understand is if continuous heading 
			is contributing to the long term problems of dementia or are they an 
			epiphenomenon - something that happens but doesn’t cause any trauma 
			or injury," said Dr. Jeffrey Bazarian, a professor of emergency 
			medicine at the University of Rochester Medical Center in New York.
 
 Concussions in soccer are understudied, compared to football, said 
			Bazarian, who was not involved with the new study. Technology 
			advances such as sensors that measure hits to the head will make 
			research easier in this area.
 
 "We’re going to see a profusion of information that’s going to be 
			really helpful," he said.
 
 SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2k5KjZC Neurology, online February 1, 2017.
 
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