According to a recent study published in the medical journal,
Radiology, it was found that among
amateur players who headed a similar number of balls, women had more signs of microscopic damage in their brains’
white matter than men.
From 2013 to 2016, 49 men and 49 women from amateur teams were subjects to a study that compared male and female players who headed the ball a similar number of times over the past year. For men, that median estimate was 487 headers. Women had an estimated median of 469 headers.
Using a special
MRI technique known as
diffusion tensor imaging, researchers identified brain regions with changes in white matter in both sexes, but that more women that men had spots that showed signs of microscopic damage.
In some ca ...