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Investigating omega-3 fatty acids’ neuroprotective effects in repetitive subconcussive neural injury: study protocol for a randomized placebo-controlled trial

Investigating omega-3 fatty acids’ neuroprotective effects in repetitive subconcussive neural injury: study protocol for a randomized placebo-controlled trial
Investigating omega-3 fatty acids’ neuroprotective effects in repetitive subconcussive neural injury: study protocol for a randomized placebo-controlled trial
Soccer (football) is the most popular sport globally, with 265 million players across all ages and sexes. Repetitive subconcussive head impacts due to heading of the soccer ball can pose threats to healthy brain development and aging. Omega-3 fatty acids, especially docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), may have neuroprotective effects, but it remains unclear what aspects of neural health benefit from DHA+EPA when faced with subconcussive head impacts. In a randomized placebo-controlled trial, 208 soccer players will complete baseline measures including demographics, blood sampling, dietary recalls, and psychological assessment. Participants will be randomly assigned to ingest DHA+EPA [3.4g/d: DHA 2.4g+EPA 1.0g] or placebo daily for 8 weeks followed by a subconcussion intervention phase. During the subconcussion intervention, participants will perform a session of 20 controlled soccer headings, with a second session 24 hours later. Blood samples, neuroimaging data, autonomic reactivity, and clinical measures (symptoms, oculomotor, cognition) will be collected pre-heading and 24-hour post-1st session, 24-hour post-2nd session, and 7-day post-2nd session. The primary hypothesis is that DHA+EPA pretreatment will promote neuronal and astrocyte resiliency to subconcussive head impacts, as assessed by blood biomarkers of brain injury, axonal microstructure measured by diffusion tensor imaging, and whole-brain resting-state connectivity. It is proposed that pretreatment will preserve autonomic function, as assessed by the cold pressor test (CPT), as well as oculomotor and cognitive function, even after head impacts. Data from this trial will help clarify the combined effect of DHA+EPA on brain molecular, cellular, and physiological health in response to subconcussive head impacts. If the hypotheses are confirmed, the findings will support a highly practical intervention for mitigating the neurodegenerative cascade triggered by head impacts.
1932-6203
Beauregard, Lauren
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Bazarian, Jeffrey J.
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Johnson, Blair D.
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Cheng, Hu
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Ellis, Gage
ec242a9f-9dca-4873-aec4-91cde0e22739
Kronenberger, William
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Calder, Philip C.
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Chen, Zhongxue
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Silveyra, Patricia
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Quinn, Patrick D.
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Newman, Sharlene D.
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Mickleborough, Timothy D.
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Kawata, Keisuke
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Beauregard, Lauren
1ab80c43-98aa-4c3e-8886-3fc1af07a38c
Bazarian, Jeffrey J.
0edc2e8d-2bc7-40d3-bbe2-d33c2a78f0e9
Johnson, Blair D.
0b1828c6-f22c-4197-b94d-60c62d5ccbca
Cheng, Hu
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Ellis, Gage
ec242a9f-9dca-4873-aec4-91cde0e22739
Kronenberger, William
a1cd1847-e1aa-4bcb-a91b-617e02a6928b
Calder, Philip C.
1797e54f-378e-4dcb-80a4-3e30018f07a6
Chen, Zhongxue
44dc68f9-924f-4dfd-b530-d4c830510398
Silveyra, Patricia
38f6aa3f-762e-4912-bc01-e30b9e43ba28
Quinn, Patrick D.
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Newman, Sharlene D.
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Mickleborough, Timothy D.
dfe232e9-356b-4bd3-8a8b-c3e60da4ce17
Kawata, Keisuke
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Beauregard, Lauren, Bazarian, Jeffrey J., Johnson, Blair D., Cheng, Hu, Ellis, Gage, Kronenberger, William, Calder, Philip C., Chen, Zhongxue, Silveyra, Patricia, Quinn, Patrick D., Newman, Sharlene D., Mickleborough, Timothy D. and Kawata, Keisuke (2025) Investigating omega-3 fatty acids’ neuroprotective effects in repetitive subconcussive neural injury: study protocol for a randomized placebo-controlled trial. PLoS ONE. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Soccer (football) is the most popular sport globally, with 265 million players across all ages and sexes. Repetitive subconcussive head impacts due to heading of the soccer ball can pose threats to healthy brain development and aging. Omega-3 fatty acids, especially docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), may have neuroprotective effects, but it remains unclear what aspects of neural health benefit from DHA+EPA when faced with subconcussive head impacts. In a randomized placebo-controlled trial, 208 soccer players will complete baseline measures including demographics, blood sampling, dietary recalls, and psychological assessment. Participants will be randomly assigned to ingest DHA+EPA [3.4g/d: DHA 2.4g+EPA 1.0g] or placebo daily for 8 weeks followed by a subconcussion intervention phase. During the subconcussion intervention, participants will perform a session of 20 controlled soccer headings, with a second session 24 hours later. Blood samples, neuroimaging data, autonomic reactivity, and clinical measures (symptoms, oculomotor, cognition) will be collected pre-heading and 24-hour post-1st session, 24-hour post-2nd session, and 7-day post-2nd session. The primary hypothesis is that DHA+EPA pretreatment will promote neuronal and astrocyte resiliency to subconcussive head impacts, as assessed by blood biomarkers of brain injury, axonal microstructure measured by diffusion tensor imaging, and whole-brain resting-state connectivity. It is proposed that pretreatment will preserve autonomic function, as assessed by the cold pressor test (CPT), as well as oculomotor and cognitive function, even after head impacts. Data from this trial will help clarify the combined effect of DHA+EPA on brain molecular, cellular, and physiological health in response to subconcussive head impacts. If the hypotheses are confirmed, the findings will support a highly practical intervention for mitigating the neurodegenerative cascade triggered by head impacts.

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Accepted/In Press date: 20 March 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 500241
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500241
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 60854e17-62df-4b04-b964-521ef624d71d
ORCID for Philip C. Calder: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6038-710X

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Date deposited: 23 Apr 2025 16:37
Last modified: 24 Apr 2025 01:34

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Contributors

Author: Lauren Beauregard
Author: Jeffrey J. Bazarian
Author: Blair D. Johnson
Author: Hu Cheng
Author: Gage Ellis
Author: William Kronenberger
Author: Zhongxue Chen
Author: Patricia Silveyra
Author: Patrick D. Quinn
Author: Sharlene D. Newman
Author: Timothy D. Mickleborough
Author: Keisuke Kawata

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