PRESS
RELEASE
May
1 ,
2003
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
THE NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES OF PARTICIPATION IN AN AMATEUR BOXING TOURNAMENT
According to Dr. James Moriarity, collegiate amateur boxers did not
show mental-status changes after competing in closely supervised bouts
during a 7-day tournament. This study was presented at the annual meeting
of the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine in San Diego.
Although previous studies have suggested that long-term mental-status
changes in professional boxers can occur, this report demonstrated no
short-term effects on the participants enrolled in the study. Eighty-two
collegiate, amateur boxers were analyzed at baseline and after 142 competitions
with a computerized-battery of tests designed to look at reaction times,
information processing, decision making, memory and other neuropsychological
measures.
No significant changes from pre-tournament baseline performance were
observed in any individual boxer, including those participants receiving
standing eight counts or those stopped by an official from further participation.
This research reveals that amateur boxing, when conducted as part of
a supervised competition does not result in acute cognitive impairment,
even in boxers subjected to repeated bouts over a short time frame.
Dr. Moriarity is the Second Vice President of AMSSM and is a team physician
for the University of Notre Dame.
The American Medical Society for Sports Medicine (AMSSM) was organized
in 1991 by a group of physicians who recognized the need for an organization
within the field of sports medicine that approached athletes, exercising
individuals, and teams comprehensively with consultative and continuous
care of their orthopedic, medical, nutritional, and psychosocial issues.
Although sports medicine concepts are often thought of in conjunction
with professional and elite athletes, these concepts apply to athletes
of all levels including grade school, high school, college and recreational
athletes (“weekend athletes”). AMSSM is comprised of Sports
Medicine Physicians whose goal is to provide a link between the rapidly
expanding core of knowledge related to sports medicine and its application
to patients in a clinical setting.
NOTE: For more information, please contact the AMSSM, 11639 Earnshaw,
Overland Park, KS 66210, (913) 327-1415 or
office@amssm.org .
© The American Medical Society for Sports Medicine