A recent study published in JAMA Network Open followed 129 male soccer players between the ages of 14 and 16 throughout a single competitive season.
The researchers compared these athletes to a control group participating in non‑contact sports and examined cognitive performance, balance, behavior and neuroimaging markers at the start and end of the season.
Initial biomarker analysis revealed that soccer players began the season with higher concentrations of tNAA, GFAP and NfL, proteins associated with brain health, but over the course of the season the tNAA levels equalized between the groups while GFAP and NfL remained elevated in the soccer cohort.
Importantly, the volume of heading exposure did not correlate with any measurable neurological changes, suggesting that the frequency of heading alone may not be the driver of the observed biomarker differences.
Implications for Future Research
The authors conclude that a single season of youth soccer does not appear to cause short‑term brain health deterioration, yet they stress the necessity of larger, multiyear investigations to fully understand the long‑term effects.