Soccer: the
most popular team sport in the world. Millions of people play the game and
over a billion people watch the World Cup soccer championship. |
||
|
What a game! Where else do people use their heads to bounce balls going 100 kilometers/hour? Although soccer is a relatively
safe sport, the game does involve contact. This contact can be:
|
||
|
As you might expect, most (50-80%) soccer injuries affect the feet and legs. However, the American Academy of Pediatrics concluded that the contact that occurs while playing soccer is at the same level as during boxing, football, ice hockey, lacrosse, rodeo and wrestling and field hockey. Head injuries account for between 4% and 22% of all soccer injuries. Can this contact cause brain damage? Let's look at the data. |
A recent study involving men's and women's college soccer teams from the Atlantic Coast Conference found a total of 29 concussions in a 2-year period. The most common cause of the concussions was when one player's head struck the head of another player. This was also the most common source of concussions in a group of soccer players at the US Olympic Sport Festival in 1993. The second most common cause of concussions occured when a ball struck a player's head. These head-to-ball concussions happened when a player was hit in the head by a ball kicked from close range. In many cases, the ball traveled so quickly the player did not have time to react. NONE of the concussions were caused by proper heading of the ball.
|
|
|
|
||
Soccer balls kicked by highly skilled players can travel over 100 km/hour. Although these ball speeds are not reached during most recreational games, some people believe that young players should wear protective helmets. Heading of the ball may have caused the neurological problems reported in soccer players. However, it is possible that other types of head injury were responsible for these injuries. For example, many professional soccer players suffer head injuries when they collide with other players or hit the ground. Therefore, soccer-related brain injury may not necessarily be due to heading the ball. On the other hand, it is unknown if repeated low intensity impacts, like those that occur when the ball is headed, make players more susceptible to later impacts.
|
| Possible Protections So, how can head injuries be reduced and minimized? Here are some recommendations:
|