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						 Brain 
						damage in former players fuels soccer 'heading' fears 
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		[February 15, 2017] 
		By Ben Hirschler 
		LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists have found 
		signs of brain damage that could cause dementia in a handful of former 
		soccer players, fuelling worries about the danger of frequent knocks 
		from heading the ball or colliding with others on the field. | 
        
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			 The small study was the first of its kind, involving post mortems on 
			six men who died with dementia after long careers playing soccer. 
			All were skilled headers of the ball. 
 It suggests that some professional soccer players might risk the 
			same long-term cognitive problems suffered by boxers and some 
			American football players.
 
 But experts said more research was needed to prove any definitive 
			link between heading a football and developing dementia, and they 
			added that the risk was likely to be minimal for occasional players.
 
 "We've demonstrated that the same type of pathology that occurs in 
			ex-boxers can also occur in some ex-footballers who have dementia, 
			but I'd emphasize this is a very small number of players," said 
			co-lead researcher Huw Morris of London's UCL Institute of 
			Neurology.
 
			
			 
			"The average playing career of these players was 26 years, which is 
			thousands of hours of game playing, thousands of hours of practice 
			and thousands of headers ... I think the risk is extremely low from 
			playing recreational football."
 Soccer is the most popular sport in the world and scientists said 
			the danger of head injuries had to be weighed against the game's 
			known benefits in improving cardiovascular health, which actually 
			reduces the likelihood of developing dementia.
 
 The study, published in the journal Acta Neuropathologica on 
			Wednesday, followed 14 retired soccer players with dementia and 
			secured next-of-kin permission for post mortem examinations for six 
			of them.
 
			
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			The scientists found evidence of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), 
			a potential cause of dementia, in four of the six brains. All six 
			also had signs of Alzheimer's disease.
 CTE is common in ex-boxers and has been linked to progressive 
			memory, behavioral and motor impairment.
 
 Unlike boxing or American football, blows to the head in soccer are 
			generally lower impact and players are less likely to experience 
			concussion. But there may still be cumulative damage from 
			sub-concussive impacts, experts believe.
 
 Britain's Football Association said more work was needed into 
			whether degenerative brain disease was more common in 
			ex-footballers, adding it planned to jointly fund research with the 
			Professional Footballers' Association.
 
 (Editing by David Holmes/Ruth Pitchford)
 
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