Using MRI to examine brain blood flow in athletes during recovery from sports-related concussions
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Sports-related concussion (SRC) is a significant public health problem. Despite tremendous efforts to increase awareness and education among team clinicians, trainers and others, there is no standardized, objective way to identify when an athlete has fully recovered from a concussion. Although return-to-play decisions are based on clinical markers of recovery (e.g., subjective symptoms, cognitive impairments), emerging research is finding that the brain may remain vulnerable even after athletes appear normal on clinical examinations. Consequently, there is a need to develop objective, brain-based markers of recovery from SRC and to use these markers to identify the period of time following clinical recovery when the brain may remain physiologically compromised.
Through this research, investigators will seek to use advanced neuroimaging techniques to examine longitudinal changes of cerebrovascular and cerebral blood flow in athletes at subacute and chronic stages of sports-related concussion, in comparison to control athletes, to determine neurophysiological recovery after traumatic brain injury.
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