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For every year of rugby played, with repeated head knocks sustained, the risk of players developing a life-altering degenerative brain disease calledCTE is thought to be a result of repeated head injuries that slam the brain into the side of the skull, damaging its tissues.
In this new study, among 31 former rugby union players who donated their brains to research, around two-thirds of the brains examined by neuropathologists had CTE. The post-mortem diagnosis was made in both amateur and elite players. Nineteen players had reported a history of concussions, although concussions were similarly common in athletes without CTE, which suggests the number of non-concussive head knocks added up over a playing career drives brain changes.
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Female board members help improve firms' corporate sustainability reporting, finds studyNew research has revealed that firms with female directors on the board, regardless of how many, improves the quality of corporate sustainability disclosures than those with no board representation.
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Study links 'short sleep' to greater risk of depression later in lifeThere seems to be a link between short sleep — less than five hours a night — and developing depression symptoms later in life, according to a large genetic study from London.
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Study finds increased melting of Antarctic ice is 'unavoidable'The research is the first to model the effects of warm water underneath Antarctica's western ice sheets.
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