Showing posts with label Chronic traumatic encephalopathy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chronic traumatic encephalopathy. Show all posts

Tuesday, 15 March 2016

NFL Official Acknowledges CTE Link

An NFL official has acknowledged a link between football and a degenerative brain disease for the first time.

Jeff Miller, the NFL’s senior vice-president for health and safety, spoke about the connection during an appearance Monday at a congressional committee’s roundtable discussion about concussions.

Democratic representative Jan Schakowsky of Illinois asked Miller: “Do you think there is a link between football and degenerative brain disorders like CTE?”

Miller, who was referring to chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), began by discussing the work of Boston University neuropathologist Dr Ann McKee, who has found CTE in the brains of 90 out of 94 former pro football players.

“Well, certainly, Dr McKee’s research shows that a number of retired NFL players were diagnosed with CTE, so the answer to that question is certainly yes, but there are also a number of questions that come with that,” Miller said.

Schakowsky repeated the question: “Is there a link?”

“Yes. Sure,” Miller responded.

The NFL has not previously linked playing football to CTE, a disease tied to repeated brain trauma and associated with symptoms such as memory loss, depression and progressive dementia. It can only be detected after death. Among the players found to have CTE in their brains were Hall of Famers Junior Seau and Ken Stabler.

During Super Bowl week, Dr Mitch Berger, a member of the NFL’s head, neck and spine committee, would not draw a direct line from football to CTE.

Miller appeared at the discussion of concussions before the House committee on energy and commerce. ESPN first reported Miller’s appearance before the committee.

Last month, Berger, chair of the department of neurological surgery at the University of California, San Francisco, repeatedly said that while the types of degenerative changes to the brain associated with CTE have been found in late football players, such signs have also been found “in all spectrums of life”.

Tao, a protein that indicates the presence of CTE, “is found in brains that have traumatic injuries”, Berger said. “Whether it’s from football, whether it’s from car accidents, whether it’s from gunshot wounds, domestic violence – it remains to be seen.”

Miller said he was “not going to speak for Dr Berger” when asked by Schakowsky about those comments.

Just before Miller spoke, McKee was asked the same question about the link between hits in football and CTE. She responded “unequivocally” that there is, and went into details about her research findings.

Miller told the committee that the entire scope of the issue needs to be addressed.

“You asked the question whether I thought there was a link,” he said. “Certainly based on Dr McKee’s research, there’s a link, because she’s found CTE in a number of retired football players. I think that the broader point, and the one that your question gets to, is what that necessarily means and where do we go from here with that information.”


Tuesday, 22 December 2015

NFL Withdraws From BU Concussion Study


The NFL has withdrawn from funding a major research initiative on the relationship between football and brain disease due to concerns over the objectivity of the Boston University doctor leading the project, the ESPN news program Outside The Lines reported on Tuesday.

The seven-year, $16m study was to be funded from a $30m research grant the NFL pledged to the National Institute of Health. That headline-grabbing donation had been characterized as an “unrestricted gift” when it was announced in 2012, a condition intended as a firewall between the league and researchers.

The NFL reportedly exercised veto power upon learning Robert Stern, a professor of neurology and neurosurgery at the private research university, had been chosen to head the project. Stern has previously criticized the NFL’s handling of concussions, most notably the $765m class-action settlement for players found to have the condition.

Boston University announced the study in a news release on Tuesday with no mention of the NFL, saying it seeks to “create methods for detecting and diagnosing chronic traumatic encephalopathy during life as well as examining risk factors for CTE”.

A September report by PBS’s Frontline documentary series, conducted by conducted by Boston University and Department of Veterans Affairs researchers, said that 87 of 91 former NFL players examined tested positive for CTE.

Previously, the biggest obstacle to being able to diagnose and study the brain disease is that the doctors have needed to examine players’ brains and the only way that’s been possible is for the player to be dead.

CTE is similar to Alzheimer’s in its symptoms – memory loss, irritability, mood changes – but with its own distinct pathology.

A league spokesperson denied the ESPN report on Tuesday morning, calling the report “not accurate” and referring further inquiries to the NIH.

Said Brian McCarthy, the league’s vice president of communications: “NFL did not pull any funding. NIH makes its own decisions.”

The announcement of the Boston University study on Tuesday comes three days before the release of the feature film Concussion, which focuses on Dr Bennet Omalu, the scientist who discovered CTE in the brains of deceased football players.


Tuesday, 8 December 2015

Avoid Impact Sport Until 18 - Omalu


The forensic pathologist and neuropathologist who first discovered chronic traumatic encephalopathy in American football players said children should not be allowed to play high-impact contact sports until they are 18 years old, likening in risks of football to smoking, alcohol and asbestos.

Dr Bennet Omalu cited a moral duty to prevent minors from playing football until they are old enough to decide about the risks for themselves in a New York Times op-ed published on Monday.

“Our children are minors who have not reached the age of consent,” Omalu wrote. “It is our moral duty as a society to protect the most vulnerable of us. The human brain becomes fully developed at about 18 to 25 years old. We should at least wait for our children to grow up, be provided with the information and education on the risk of play, and let them make their own decisions. No adult, not a parent or a coach, should be allowed to make this potentially life-altering decision for a child.

“We have a legal age for drinking alcohol; for joining the military; for voting; for smoking; for driving; and for consenting to have sex. We must have the same when it comes to protecting the organ that defines who we are as human beings.”

Omalu’s research into CTE is the subject of the forthcoming film Concussion, in theatres on 25 December in the USA, in which he is played by Will Smith.