Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging detects ischemic injury within minutes after onset, and has been used to demonstrate drug efficacy in animal models of stroke. In 50 patients diagnosed with acute ischemic stroke (<24-hour duration) within the middle cerebral artery territory, lesion volume was measured by diffusion-weighted imaging. Thirty-four patients also had volumes measured by T2-weighted imaging chronically (median time, 7.5 weeks; mean, 15.9 weeks). Clinical severity was measured by the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Score and the Barthel index. Acute lesion volumes correlated with the acute stroke scale score (r = 0.56), the chronic stroke scale score (r = 0.63), and chronic lesion volumes (r = 0.84). Chronic volumes correlated with the chronic stroke scale score (r = 0.86) and the Barthel index (r = -0.60). When only cortically based lesions were considered, the correlations relating acute lesion volume measured by diffusion-weighted imaging (r = 0.61) and chronic lesion volume measured by T2-weighted imaging (r = 0.90) to the chronic stroke scale score were higher. These results provide evidence that lesion volumes determined by diffusion-weighted imaging acutely may be predictive of clinical severity and outcome, and may support a role for diffusion-weighted imaging in the assessment of acute stroke therapies in clinical trials.
Key Points Question What are the long-term health risks of National Football League (NFL) players compared with Major League Baseball (MLB) players, another group of elite athletes? Findings In this cohort study of 3419 NFL and 2708 MLB players, NFL players had significantly higher mortality rates from all causes, cardiovascular diseases, and neurodegenerative diseases compared with MLB players. Meaning This study found that NFL players had a higher rate of mortality than MLB players, which may be associated with aspects of playing in professional American-style football.
Background: Former American football players have a higher prevalence of cognitive impairment than that of the US general population. It remains unknown what aspects of playing football are associated with neuropsychiatric outcomes. Hypothesis: It was hypothesized that seasons of professional football, playing position, and experience of concussions were associated with cognition-related quality of life (QOL) and indicators of depression and anxiety. Study Design: Descriptive epidemiology study. Methods: The authors examined whether seasons of professional football, playing position, and experience of concussions, as measured by self-report of 10 symptoms, were associated with cognition-related QOL and indicators of depression and anxiety in a cross-sectional survey conducted 2015 to 2017. Cognition-related QOL was measured by the short form of the Quality of Life in Neurological Disorders: Applied Cognition–General Concerns. The Patient Health Questionnaire–4 measured depression and anxiety symptoms. Of 13,720 eligible men with apparently valid contact information, 3506 players returned a questionnaire at the time of this analysis (response rate = 25.6%). Results: Seasons of professional play (risk ratio [RR] per 5 seasons = 1.19, 95% CI = 1.06-1.34) and playing position were associated with cognition-related QOL. Each 5 seasons of play was associated with 9% increased risk of indicators of depression at borderline statistical significance ( P = .05). When compared with former kickers, punters, and quarterbacks, men who played any other position had a higher risk of poor cognition-related QOL, depression, and anxiety. Concussion symptoms were strongly associated with poor cognition-related QOL (highest concussion quartile, RR = 22.3, P < .001), depression (highest quartile, RR = 6.0, P < .0001), and anxiety (highest quartile, RR = 6.4, P < .0001), even 20 years after last professional play. Conclusion: The data suggest that seasons of play and playing position in the NFL are associated with lasting neuropsychiatric health deficits. Additionally, poor cognition-related QOL, depression, and anxiety appear to be associated with concussion in the long term.
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