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NFL Concussions Linked to High Blood Pressure in Players

Author: Harvard Medical School
Published: 2023/02/12 - Updated: 2026/02/10
Publication Type: Findings
Category Topic: Sports - Related Publications

Contents: Synopsis - Introduction - Main - Insights, Updates

Synopsis: This research from Harvard Medical School's Football Players Health Study presents findings from the largest cohort study of former professional football players to date, analyzing data from over 4,000 retired NFL athletes. The study establishes a measurable connection between repetitive head injuries sustained during athletic careers and subsequent development of hypertension, even when controlling for traditional risk factors like obesity, diabetes, and smoking. Published in the medical journal Circulation, this research proves valuable for retired athletes, healthcare providers treating former players, caregivers of individuals with traumatic brain injury histories, and those managing cardiovascular conditions linked to earlier physical trauma. The findings offer practical intervention opportunities since hypertension responds well to treatment through exercise, diet modification, and medication - Disabled World (DW).

Definition: National Football League (NFL)

The National Football League (NFL) is a professional American football league that consists of 32 teams, divided equally between the American Football Conference (AFC) and the National Football Conference (NFC).

Introduction

Head Injury and Hypertension in Former NFL Players

Association Between Concussion Burden During Professional American-Style Football and Post-Career Hypertension - Circulation.

The chance that former professional football players will be diagnosed with high blood pressure - a known risk factor for cardiovascular and cognitive dysfunction - rises in step with the number of concussions the athletes sustained during their careers, according to new research by investigators for the Football Players Health Study at Harvard University.

The results held true even after researchers considered established risk factors known to drive the risk for high blood pressure or hypertension, including age, body mass index, race, smoking status, and a diagnosis of diabetes.

Main Content

The results of the study, published Feb. 7 in Circulation, suggest that high blood pressure may be yet another driver of cognitive decline - a condition strongly linked with professional football play in previous studies and believed to stem primarily from a repeated head injury. The findings also point to high blood pressure as a modifiable risk factor that could halt or slow both neurologic and cardiovascular damage in former players.

Given that cardiovascular illness remains a top killer in former athletes and the general population, the researchers said the results should be an impetus for doctors, former players, and their families to consider a history of prior head injury when screening patients for hypertension - even in the absence of other risk factors for this condition.

"If players, families, and physicians are aware of the cardiovascular effects of head injury, we have a better chance of protecting both their cardiovascular health and long-term cognitive health," said Rachel Grashow, director of epidemiological research initiatives for the Football Players Health Study.

Grashow co-led the new study with Aaron Baggish, professor of medicine at the University of Lausanne, a senior faculty member at the Football Players Health Study, and former director of Massachusetts General Hospital's Cardiovascular Performance Program, which provides comprehensive cardiac care to athletes.

The research - based on a survey of more than 4,000 former National Football League players representing the largest study cohort of former professional football players to date - was conducted as part of the ongoing Football Players Health Study at Harvard University, a research program that encompasses a constellation of studies designed to evaluate various aspects of players' health across their life span.

Grashow explained that most research on cognitive decline in former professional football players has focused on neurodegeneration caused directly by repeated concussions, a prominent aspect of the game. However, the leading cause of death and disability among former football players - and Americans in general - is cardiovascular disease, a collection of conditions that affect the heart and blood vessels. Hypertension, the most common cause of these conditions, can also gradually damage blood vessels in the brain and, over time, lead to cognitive decline.

Various aspects of professional football, such as purposeful weight gain during play years and deconditioning after career end, are associated with hypertension. However, Grashow, Baggish, and their colleagues wondered whether concussion might also be independently associated with hypertension.

To answer this question, the researchers collected information from 4,168 former NFL players. The team analyzed known risk factors for hypertension in the general population - diabetes, obesity, age, smoking - as well as players' number of seasons of play, field position, years since play, and the occurrence of 10 common concussion symptoms. These symptoms were used to calculate a concussion symptom score, or CSS.

The analysis showed that as players' symptom scores rose, so did their likelihood of being diagnosed with hypertension, even after researchers accounted for known hypertension risk factors. Notably, even using the number of occurrences of just one severe concussion symptom - loss of consciousness - was enough to accurately predict players' likelihood of developing hypertension.

Grashow said that while it remains unclear exactly how concussion leads to hypertension, one hypothesis is that repeat concussions could cause a chronic inflammation that prompts blood pressure to rise. Uncovering the precise mechanism underlying concussion-related hypertension will be the subject of future research, she added.

Baggish added that, unlike many risk factors for cognitive decline, hypertension is potentially controllable with an array of safe and effective therapies, including routine aerobic exercise, dietary modification, and, in some cases, medication.

"By identifying those at increased risk for hypertension based on their history of head injuries, we could intervene with therapies that protect not only their hearts and blood vessels, but also their brains," Baggish said.

Authorship, Funding, Disclosures

Additional authors included Can Ozan Tan, Saef Izzy, Herman Taylor Jr., Marc Weisskopf, Meagan Wasfy, Alicia Whittington, Frank Speizer, and Ross Zafonte. This work was supported by the Football Players Health Study at Harvard University, which is funded by the National Football League Players Association (NFLPA). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of Harvard Medical School, Harvard University, and its affiliated academic healthcare centers. The NFLPA had no role in the design and conduct of the study; collection, management, analysis, and interpretation of the data; preparation, review, or approval of the manuscript; and the decision to submit the manuscript for publication.

Insights, Analysis, and Developments

Editorial Note: The implications of this research extend well beyond the football field, suggesting that anyone with a history of repeated head trauma - whether from athletics, military service, accidents, or falls - may face elevated cardiovascular risks that warrant earlier and more aggressive screening. What makes these findings particularly significant is the identification of hypertension as a modifiable risk factor, meaning former players and others with concussion histories aren't powerless against cognitive decline. With proper medical monitoring and intervention, the dual threats to heart and brain health can be addressed simultaneously. As our understanding of traumatic brain injury evolves, this study reinforces an important truth: the effects of head injuries don't end when the immediate symptoms fade, and long-term health management requires accounting for injuries sustained years or even decades earlier - Disabled World (DW).

Attribution/Source(s): This quality-reviewed publication was selected for publishing by the editors of Disabled World (DW) due to its relevance to the disability community. Originally authored by Harvard Medical School and published on 2023/02/12, this content may have been edited for style, clarity, or brevity.

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APA: Harvard Medical School. (2023, February 12 - Last revised: 2026, February 10). NFL Concussions Linked to High Blood Pressure in Players. Disabled World (DW). Retrieved February 27, 2026 from www.disabled-world.com/sports/nfl-tbi.php
MLA: Harvard Medical School. "NFL Concussions Linked to High Blood Pressure in Players." Disabled World (DW), 12 Feb. 2023, revised 10 Feb. 2026. Web. 27 Feb. 2026. <www.disabled-world.com/sports/nfl-tbi.php>.
Chicago: Harvard Medical School. "NFL Concussions Linked to High Blood Pressure in Players." Disabled World (DW). Last modified February 10, 2026. www.disabled-world.com/sports/nfl-tbi.php.

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