Background And Objectives: Repeated impacts in high-contact sports such as American football can affect the brain's microstructure, which can be studied using diffusion MRI. Most imaging studies are cross-sectional, do not include low-contact players as controls, or lack advanced tract-specific microstructural metrics. We aimed to investigate longitudinal changes in high-contact collegiate athletes compared with low-contact controls using advanced diffusion MRI and automated fiber quantification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAneurysmal bone cysts (ABC) are rare in the paranasal sinuses. They are benign expansile multicystic masses containing blood-filled spaces which typically occur in the long bones of pediatric patients. The lesion often produces symptoms due to the compression of adjacent structures or pathological fracture and depends on localization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAthletes participating in high-contact sports experience repeated head trauma. Anatomical findings, such as a cavum septum pellucidum, prominent CSF spaces, and hippocampal volume reductions, have been observed in cases of mild traumatic brain injury. The extent to which these neuroanatomical findings are associated with high-contact sports is unknown.
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