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Sports Medicine and Biomechanics

Inflammatory and apoptotic signalling pathways and concussion severity: a genetic association study

, , , , &
Pages 2226-2234 | Accepted 28 Feb 2018, Published online: 06 Mar 2018
 

ABSTRACT

The objective was to investigate the relationship between IL-1B rs16944, IL-6 rs1800795, and CASP8 rs3834129 genetic polymorphisms and concussion severity. Rugby players from high school, senior amateur, and professional teams completed a concussion severity questionnaire and donated a DNA sample. Participants (n = 163) were split into symptom severity groups around the median number and duration of symptoms. The frequency of participants with high symptom counts (more than five symptoms) increased across the IL-1B (C/C: 35%; C/T: 51%; T/T: 56%; P = 0.047) and the IL-6 (C/C: 31%; C/G: 44%; G/G: 58%; P = 0.027) genotypes. The C–C inferred interleukin allele construct frequency, created from combining the IL-1B and IL-6 genotype data, was lower in participants reporting a high symptom count (18%), compared to those with a low symptom count (fewer than six symptoms, 36%, P = 0.002). Similarly, the C–C inferred interleukin allele construct frequency was lower in those reporting prolonged symptom duration (more than one week, 16%), as opposed to short symptom duration (less than one week, 34%, P = 0.015). This study provides evidence of novel inflammatory pathway genetic associations with concussion severity, which supports the hypothesis implicating neuroinflammation in the development of concussion symptoms.

Acknowledgments

The National Research Foundation funded the study (A.V.S., grant number 90942), (M.P., grant numbers 93416:2015, 85534:2015). The National Research Foundation and the University of Cape Town funded S.A. and S.M.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

The National Research Foundation funded the study [A.V.S., grant number 90942], [M.P., grant numbers 93416:2015, 85534:2015]. The National Research Foundation and the University of Cape Town funded S.A. and S.M.

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