Contact and collision sports are believed to accelerate brain aging. Postmortem studies of the human brain have implicated tau deposition in and around the perivascular space as a biomarker of an as yet poorly understood neurodegenerative process. Relatively little is known about the effects that collision sport participation has on the age-related trajectories of macroscale brain structure and function, particularly in female athletes. Diffusion MRI and resting-state functional MRI were obtained from female collision sport athletes ( = 19 roller derby (RD) players; 23-45 years old) and female control participants ( = 14; 20-49 years old) to quantify structural coupling (S) and decoupling (S). The novel and interesting finding is that RD athletes, but not controls, exhibited increasing S with age in two association networks: the frontoparietal network, important for cognitive control, and default-mode network, a task-negative network (permuted = 0.0006). Age-related increases in S were also observed in sensorimotor networks (RD, controls) and age-related increases in S were observed in association networks (controls) (permuted ≤ 0.0001). These distinct patterns suggest that competing in RD results in compressed neuronal timescales in critical networks as a function of age and encourages the broader study of female athlete brains across the lifespan.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8774127 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12010022 | DOI Listing |
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