Breakdancers are known for their gravity-defying moves, but some may pay a hidden price. After nearly two decades of spinning ...
Copenhagen neurosurgeons said in a case study that a tumor created a cone-shaped bump atop a breakdancer’s head.
A good hair day can make you feel like a million bucks, but a bad one can do the opposite. Between bumps on your scalp, frizziness, hair loss, unruly strands, dandruff and more, so much can go wrong ...
Repetitive headspins in breakdancing may cause a protruding lump on the scalp, hair loss and tenderness, a new study from ...
Doctors have warned break dancers to avoid head spinning after performers developed strange cone-like lumps on their noggins ...
Breakdancers have been urged to avoid headspinning after a dancer who developed a cone-shaped lump on his head due to "years ...
Dubbed the 'headspin hole,' or 'breakdance bulge,' the condition is unique to breakdancers, and appears as a protruding lump ...
Breakdancers can develop a fibrous mass on the scalp, known as the headspin hole, due to repetitive headspins. A recent BMJ ...
Turns out, the dancer was experiencing a phenomenon called “headspin hole” or “breakdance bulge,” according to the report, which manifests itself through hair loss, inflammation and numbness, as well ...
Specifically, breakers appear to run the risk of “headspin hole” or “breakdance bulge,” a protruding lump on the scalp formed ...
NEW YORK, Oct. 10 (UPI) --Breakdancers who perform repetitive headspins risk a unique ailment -- a protruding lump on the scalp, hair loss and tenderness, a new study from Denmark cautions.
Specifically, breakers appear to run the risk of “headspin hole” or “breakdance bulge,” a protruding lump on the scalp formed by too many headspins on the floor, researchers say in the ...