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Journal Article

Citation

Machan M, Tabor JB, Wang M, Sutter B, Wiley JP, Mychasiuk R, Debert CT. Front. Sports Act. Living 2022; 4: e816607.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Frontiers Media)

DOI

10.3389/fspor.2022.816607

PMID

35243342

PMCID

PMC8886719

Abstract

To date, sport-related concussion diagnosis and management is primarily based on subjective clinical tests in the absence of validated biomarkers. A major obstacle to clinical validation and application is a lack of studies exploring potential biomarkers in non-injured populations. This cross-sectional study examined the associations between saliva telomere length (TL) and multiple confounding variables in a healthy university athlete population. One hundred eighty-three (108 male and 75 female) uninjured varsity athletes were recruited to the study and provided saliva samples at either pre- or mid-season, for TL analysis. Multiple linear regression was used to determine the associations between saliva TL and history of concussion, sport contact type, time in season (pre vs. mid-season collection), age, and sex.

RESULTS showed no significant associations between TL and history of concussion, age, or sport contact type. However, TL from samples collected mid-season were longer than those collected pre-season [β = 231.4, 95% CI (61.9, 401.0), p = 0.008], and males had longer TL than females [β = 284.8, 95% CI (111.5, 458.2), p = 0.001] when adjusting for all other variables in the model. These findings population suggest that multiple variables may influence TL. Future studies should consider these confounders when evaluating saliva TL as a plausible fluid biomarker for SRC.


Language: en

Keywords

sport-related concussion; saliva; athletes; fluid biomarkers; telomere length

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