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This is Scientific American's 60-Second Health. I'm Dina Fine Maron. Got a minute?

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Heavy metal music can be hazardous to your health, at least, in what appear to be rare circumstances.

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A 50-year-old fan who recently rocked out at a Mot?rhead concert developed bleeding in the brain that required surgical repair.

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He had celebrated the band's signature fast tempo music by headbanging,

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that is, violently pitching his noggin to and fro in time to the music.

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A month after the concert, the man experienced an intense headache.

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Doctors found on the right side of his brain a chronic subdural hematoma:

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an injury where blood collects under the brain's outer protective membrane.

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Surgeons fixed him up.

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The case study is in the journal The Lancet.

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Headbanging is usually considered relatively harmless, though it can cause whiplash or shorter-term head or neck pain.

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A follow-up scan of the Mot?rhead fan revealed that a benign cyst may have made him more vulnerable to brain injury than your standard heavy metal enthusiast.

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The study authors say devotees may maintain their headbanging habit, as such bleeds are so uncommon.

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Even more uncommon are brain injuries sustained at concerts featuring the music of Mozart, Mahler or even Rachmaninoff.

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Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American's 60-Second Health. I'm Dina Fine Maron.

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