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Research Article

Repetitive head-injury exposure and later-in-life cognitive and emotional outcomes among former collegiate football players: a CLEAATS investigation

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Received 02 Apr 2024, Accepted 02 May 2024, Published online: 14 May 2024
 

Abstract

This study measured the relationship between head-injury exposure and later-in-life cognitive and emotional symptoms in aging collegiate football players who participated in the College Level Aging Athlete Study. Linear regressions examined the relationship between various head-injury exposure variables (head-injury exposure estimate [HIEE], number of diagnosed concussions, and symptomatic hits to the head) and subjective cognitive function, objective cognitive function, and emotional/mood symptoms. Additional regressions evaluated the impact of emotional symptoms on subjective cognitive decline and objective cognitive function. Participants (n = 216) were 50–87 years old (M = 63.4 [8.5]), 91% White, and well-educated (bachelor’s/graduate degree = 92%). HIEE did not predict scores on cognitive or emotional/mood symptom measures (p’s > .169). Diagnosed concussions had a small effect on depression symptoms (p = .002, b = 0.501, R2 = .052) and subjective cognitive symptoms (p = .002, b = 0.383, R2 = .051). An emotional symptom index had a stronger relationship (p < .001, b = 0.693, R2 = .362) with subjective cognitive functioning but no significant relationship with objective cognitive function (p = .052, b = −0.211, R2 = .020). Controlling for emotional symptoms, the relationship between concussions and subjective cognitive symptoms was attenuated (p = .078, R2 = .011). Findings suggested that head-injury exposure was not significantly related to cognitive or emotional/mood outcomes in former collegiate football players and highlighted the importance of current emotional/mood symptoms on subjective cognitive function.

Acknowledgements

This work was funded primarily by the Darrell K. Royal Research Fund, and supported in part by the Peter O’Donnell Jr. Brain Institute at UT Southwestern Medical Center.

Disclosure statement

Authors support no conflicts of interest pertinent to the current study.

Correction Statement

This article has been corrected with minor changes. These changes do not impact the academic content of the article.

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