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According to a significant new report, head traumas endured in sports like football, rugby, and boxing should be officially acknowledged as a potential cause of dementia.
Specialists assert that engaging in these sports increases the likelihood of developing chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a degenerative brain disorder associated with repetitive head injuries over the years.
The report, featured in the journal Alzheimer’s & Dementia, analyzed 614 brain donors who experienced frequent head traumas, predominantly from contact sports.
Those brain donors who exhibited the most severe form of CTE, without any other brain disease indications, were found to be four times more likely to develop dementia compared to those who did not have the condition.
Professor Michael Alosco, a neurology specialist at Boston University and the study’s lead author, stated, “This research offers evidence that CTE could be a cause of dementia.”
“Recognizing that cognitive symptoms and dementia can result from CTE brings us closer to the critical goal of detecting and diagnosing CTE accurately during a person’s lifetime,” Alosco explained, highlighting the urgent need for such advancements.
The findings come amid growing legal action against football authorities, with former players and families claiming the sport failed to protect them from brain injuries caused by repeated impacts, including heading.
Yesterday a coroner ruled that heading a football ‘likely’ contributed to brain injury that was a factor in the death of former Scotland defender Gordon McQueen.
Gordon McQueen died aged 70 after a 16-year career. It was found yesterday that heading a football likely contributed to the brain injury which was a factor in his death
The coroner said: ‘It is likely that repetitive head impacts sustained by heading the ball while playing football contributed to the CTE’
McQueen died aged 70 after a 16-year career. He had been diagnosed with both vascular dementia and CTE.
The coroner said: ‘It is likely that repetitive head impacts sustained by heading the ball while playing football contributed to the CTE.’
A string of high-profile footballers have also been diagnosed with dementia before their deaths, including 1966 World Cup winner Nobby Stiles, Sir Bobby Charlton, Ray Wilson and Martin Peters.
Former Burnley star Andy Peyton was diagnosed with young-onset dementia at 57 after suffering headaches and memory problems. He reportedly sought a brain scan after his former teammate Dean Windass was given the same diagnosis.
CTE is marked by a distinctive build-up of toxic tau proteins in the brain, which form clumps known as plaques and tangles – similar to those seen in Alzheimer’s, the most common cause of dementia.
However, researchers say CTE has its own characteristic pattern of damage and can trigger a different clinical picture, meaning many cases are missed or mistaken for other conditions.
Early symptoms may include changes in mood, personality and behaviour, before progressing to more obvious short-term memory loss, confusion and difficulties with planning and organising.
Some patients can also develop problems with movement.
The former striker Andy Peyton is the latest player to say he has been diagnosed with young-onset dementia as cases continue to accelerate
Other notable deaths include Jack Charlton, Nobby Stiles and Martin Peters
Peyton was prompted to go for a brain scan after his former teammate Dean Windass (pictured) was diagnosed with young-onset dementia
Symptoms tend to develop gradually, often around a decade after years of repeated head impacts.
The study also found dementia linked to CTE is frequently misdiagnosed in life.
Among 186 donors who had received a dementia diagnosis while alive, 40 per cent were told they had Alzheimer’s disease – despite there being no evidence of Alzheimer’s at autopsy.
Another 38 per cent had been told the cause of their dementia was ‘unknown’ or could not be specified.
Prof Alosco added: ‘There is a viewpoint out there that CTE is a benign brain disease; this is the opposite of the experience of most patients and families.
‘Evidence from this study shows CTE has a significant impact on people’s lives, and now we need to accelerate efforts to distinguish CTE from Alzheimer’s disease and other causes of dementia during life.’