PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Subconcussive head impact exposure between drill intensities in U.S. high school football.

  • Kyle Kercher,
  • Jesse A Steinfeldt,
  • Jonathan T Macy,
  • Keisuke Ejima,
  • Keisuke Kawata

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237800
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 8
p. e0237800

Abstract

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USA Football established five levels-of-contact to guide the intensity of high school football practices. The objective of this study was to examine head impact frequency and magnitude by levels-of-contact to determine which drills had the greatest head impact exposure. Our primary hypothesis was that there would be an incremental increase in season-long head impact exposure between levels-of-contact: air100g) head impacts were more frequently observed during live and thud drills. Level-of-contact influences cumulative head impact frequency and magnitude in high-school football, with players incurring frequent, high magnitude head impacts during live, thud, and control. It is important to consider level-of-contact to refine clinical exposure guidelines to minimize head impact burden in high-school football.