Friday, May 23, 2025
8.8 C
London

Soccer players more likely to get dementia

- Advertisement -

There is a 50% chance that soccer players will get dementia. These are the findings of a report in The Lancet Public Health. Scientists say the finding is based on research done on thousands of players in Sweden. Of these it was found that one in 11 were suffering from dementia.

Dr Peter Ueda from the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm’s said, “The overall evidence supports the hypothesis that former elite football (soccer) players are at increased risk of neurodegenerative disease, especially Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia.”

A staggering 537 people out of 6,007 were diagnosed. It just goes to show that heading the ball damages the brain however goalkeepers were not at higher risk.

“It has been hypothesized the repetitive mild head trauma sustained and concussions might cause neurodegenerative disease. It could be that the difference in neurodegenerative disease risk between these two types of players supports this theory.”

- Advertisement -

“Male football (soccer) players in the Swedish top division had a 1.5-fold increased risk of neurodegenerative disease compared with population controls who were matched on sex, age and region of residence.”

“Unlike outfield players, goalkeepers did not have an increased risk of dementia – supporting the hypothesis mild head impacts sustained when heading the ball could explain the increased risk in outfield players.”

Another research paper by Glasgow university also showed that former soccer players in Scotland were also 3.5 times more likely to get dementia.

“We found a significantly higher risk of neurodegenerative disease diagnosis and neurodegenerative disease mortality among soccer players than population controls. However, the magnitude of the association was not as large.”

- Advertisement -

“By the late 1990s almost all top division players had football (soccer) as their full-time occupation. Further research is needed to investigate how exposures associated with health outcomes might differ across populations of elite football (soccer) players,” said Dr Ueda.

For now, children under the age of 12 in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland have already been banned from heading the ball during training or soccer practice.

Read More News

Women barking at each other, literally 

- Advertisement -

NOTE: Photo above is a screen grab from YouTube

- Advertisement -

Hot this week

Kate Middleton expecting twins, according to reports

According to news on the Internet, the Duchess of...

Is BTS’s Taehyung colour blind?

The rumour mill online has been speculating that Korean...

Hurley wore ‘the dress’ after being snubbed by top fashion designers

Model Liz Hurley became famous after wearing "the dress"...

Hyun Bin taking legal action against rumours involving Son Ye Jin

While the hottest K-drama screening on-air is undoubtedly Crash...

HK protesters call for boycott of Ip Man 4: The Finale

Hong Kong -- The final instalment of the Ip...

ChatGPT at two — and OpenAI’s vision for the future

Two years after OpenAI launched ChatGPT, the groundbreaking AI...

Vertical Institute Unveils Generative AI Course to Meet Growing Demand for Digital Proficiency

The future of work is undeniably intertwined with artificial...

Jimmy Carter: The Nobel US president who lived to be 100

Jimmy Carter, the peanut farmer who became the 39th...

Manmohan Singh: The leader who transformed India

Manmohan Singh's story is one of remarkable transformation, both...

Why AI ‘hallucinates’: What’s missing in the models

The American writer Richard Powers' latest novel, Playground, delves...

Challenging job market diminishes appeal of postgraduate studies in China

China is seeing a significant decline in postgraduate entrance...

Fatherhood changing in East Asia: Dads get into parenting and housework

A transformation in fatherhood is quietly unfolding across East...

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_img