Heavy metal headbanging can damage brain<br><br>Doctors in Germany have warned people that headbanging could be bad<br><br>for your health. Headbanging is a dance done by fans of heavy metal<br><br>music. Dancers shake their heads backwards and forwards, and from side<br><br>to side, very quickly. Doctors say that it is possible the dance can lead to<br><br>brain injury. German doctors recently treated a 50-year-old fan of the<br><br>heavy metal band Motorhead. His headbanging led to brain damage.<br><br>Doctors said the man had no previous history of head injuries but had<br><br>been headbanging regularly for many years. The doctors said the risk of<br><br>damage to the brain from headbanging was still low and said heavy metal<br><br>fans do not need to stop doing the dance.<br><br>The man complained of bad headaches after going to a Motorhead<br><br>concert. He went to hospital for a brain scan. Doctors found he had<br><br>bleeding inside his brain. He needed an operation to repair the damage<br><br>from the headbanging. Doctors drilled a hole in his brain to release some<br><br>blood. Two months after the operation his headaches disappeared. The<br><br>head doctor Ariyan Pirayesh said: "We are not against headbanging. The<br><br>risk of injury is very, very low. I think if our patient had gone to a<br><br>classical concert, this would not have happened." He had good news for<br><br>heavy metal fans and said they should carry on enjoying dancing, saying:<br><br>"Rock 'n' roll will never die. Heavy metal fans should rock on."
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