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Sports related head injuries and mental health of athletes

Sport related concussion is defined as the immediate and generally flash symptoms of traumatic brain injury convinced by biomechanical forces. A range of neurological symptoms may affect, largely reflecting functional rather than structural brain disturbance. Post-concussive injury can do across physical, cognitive and emotional disciplines, and there's growing interest in medical surveillance of athletes post-concussion. A small proportion of athletes continue to witness patient concussion symptoms, which may be rained or eternalized by the inflexibility of exposure, early post-traumatic or retrograde amnesia, comorbidities or pre-morbidities or youngish age. Media reporting of high profile athlete significant mood and behavioral disturbance has drawn public attention to the link between concussive injuries and poor psychosocial issues latterly in life. The implicit negative cerebral issues of sport related concussion have clearly been considered within acute post-concussion assessment tools, and the current replication of the Sport concussion assessment tool includes a number of cerebral disciplines, similar as problems with perversity, sadness, attention, or feeling more emotional. The 2017 Concussion in sport group consensus statement also highlights the significance of post-concussive internal health symptoms, and advises that the development of depression post-concussion or the actuality of pre-injury depression are likely threat factors for patient post-concussive symptoms. Lower is known, still, about the relationship between sport- related concussion and internal health issues other than depression, similar as anxiety, substance abuse, psychosis reality deformation, or personality disturbance. Recent reviews of the association between concussion and internal health issues have been conducted with mixed samples of elite and non-elite, adult sport actors athletes. These reviews have plant concussion exposure to be a threat factor for posterior internal health problems in some, but not all, individualities. Finkbeiner and associates` review examined grown-up, sport- related concussion studies that assessed internal health at least 3 months post-concussive exposure. The authors concluded that utmost studies suggested an increased frequency of depressive symptoms related to concussion history, with inconsistent substantiation for anxiety and substance use. More lately, associates conducted a methodical review of sport- related concussion studies that reported long-term issues across clinical, cognitive and brain imaging disciplines. Manley and associates also plant an association between latterly- life depression and multiple previous concussions, with a cure-response relationship linked between depression and concussion exposure in five studies. No conclusions could be drawn still for other internal health
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Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:biological and medical sciences
Tagging:Gehirnerschütterung mentale Gesundheit
Published in:Journal of Athletic Enhancement
Language:English
Published: 2022
Online Access:https://www.scitechnol.com/peer-review/sports-related-head-injuries-and-mental-health-of-athletes-yuTV.php?article_id=18118
Volume:11
Issue:1
Pages:1-2
Document types:article
Level:advanced