https://www.si.com/nfl/2017/07/25/boston-university-study-cte-nfl-player-brains
Not good news for parents.
Not good news for parents.
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https://www.si.com/nfl/2017/07/25/boston-university-study-cte-nfl-player-brains
Not good news for parents.
I have a 15 year old son, my only child. We were talking about sports this year and he asked my opinion on playing soccer vs football. Like most of you, I grew up in Texas. Football has always held a special place in my heart but without flinching I told him to play soccer. CTE worries me. I can deal with broken bones/ligaments, brain injuries I cannot. Reading that article, I firmly stand by the decision.
The family of the only NFL player without CTE did not authorize for Dr. McKee to publicly identify him.
I have a 15 year old son, my only child. We were talking about sports this year and he asked my opinion on playing soccer vs football. Like most of you, I grew up in Texas. Football has always held a special place in my heart but without flinching I told him to play soccer. CTE worries me. I can deal with broken bones/ligaments, brain injuries I cannot. Reading that article, I firmly stand by the decision.
I didn't let my son play until public school (7th grade) for a couple of reasons. First is that I don't trust "dad coaches" who are not trained on proper tackling and blocking techniques, and are not trained on how to identify and treat potential head injuries. Watching just an episode of Friday Night Tykes shows this problem all too clearly.
The second is the studies about the developing brains of 6-10 year olds are showing serious concerns about contact sports. He played flag up until 7th grade in order to get some skill position experience, and most important, to have fun.
When he did start playing in 7th grade, we had one rule: your season is immediately over if you suffer any kind of head trauma or injury. No exceptions.
btw, CTE is a concern in soccer, too. CTE found in former soccer players, study shows
None of the players studied had experienced significant concussions during their careers, indicating that repetitive blows to the head -- such as through hitting other players, the ball or goalposts -- are playing a key role.
None of the players studied had experienced significant concussions during their careers ...
Huge problem is selection bias folks with concerns over their young men who have died donate, those with no worries don't.
It's still very troubling.
Kirby Lee / USA TODAY Sports
Brady: It's nobody's business but mine if I had a concussion last season
David P. Woods Aug 4, 2017 11:05 AM
Tom Brady won't reveal whether he suffered a concussion last season because he doesn't believe it's anyone's business but his.
Speaking to reporters at New England Patriots training camp Friday, Brady wouldn't discuss his health and said that type of information is personal, according to ESPN's Mike Reiss.
The NFL, which requires players and teams to disclose concussions, would probably disagree.
Brady's wife, supermodel Gisele Bundchen, said on "CBS This Morning" in May that Brady did indeed suffer a concussion in 2016.
"He had a concussion last year," Bundchen said. "I mean he has concussions pretty much ... we don't talk about it. But he does have concussions. I don't really think it's a healthy thing for your body to go through that kind of aggression all the time. That cannot be healthy for you, right? I'm planning on having him be healthy and do a lot of fun things when we're like 100, I hope."
Brady appeared on the Patriots' injury report several times in 2016, but was never listed as having a concussion. In fact, he hasn't appeared on the injury report with a concussion in any of the past four seasons.
I wonder if he gave Bundchen a good spanking for spilling the beans.
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They are made of fully encased foam. The small mechanicals are located at the base (and fully encased with the foam). There is a cutoff switch that is activated immediately upon impact.What about the guy hitting the dummy?
Former NFL running back Larry Johnson said he has no memory of two full seasons, and that he’s considered violence toward others and himself as a result of what he believes is chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).
For now, CTE can only be confirmed after death, but he told The Washington Post that the anxiety, paranoia, self-destructive impulses and violent mood swings that he suffers are a result of the degenerative brain disorder.
At one point, he described “demons” that flood his brain and push him toward jumping from the roof of an apartment building.
“One is telling you to do it; one is telling you don’t,” Johnson, a 2002 Heisman finalist, told The Washington Post. “One is telling you it’d be fun.”
...
While Johnson shares custody of his daughter with the child’s mother, he said that it’s the hours spent without her that he worries about whether he can control the “demons” that surface. He described a recent outing with friends where he had to leave without explanation after developing an irresistible urge to punch one of the men for being chatty.
“Something so easily dismissed,” he told the Washington Post. “But it’s just – once I get in that mood, I can’t stop it. And it comes out of nowhere.”
Johnson, who said he’s always had somewhat of a “me against everybody” mentality, quit therapy and stopped taking prescribed medication because he feels he’s better equipped to deal with his emotions without help. He got rid of his gun collection and mentors disadvantaged children, and regularly turns down offers to socialize with friends at trendy nightclubs.
That's pretty tough reading. This whole CTE thing has definitely changed my views on football and toughing things out. The money is great but health and family are even better. I hope Larry Johnson finds the help he needs. I can't imagine living that.
Former NFLer Larry Johnson believes he's living with CTE
http://www.foxnews.com/health/2017/...rry-johnson-believes-hes-living-with-cte.html
Another article about Larry Johnson hereThat's pretty tough reading. This whole CTE thing has definitely changed my views on football and toughing things out. The money is great but health and family are even better. I hope Larry Johnson finds the help he needs. I can't imagine living that.
Former NFLer Larry Johnson believes he's living with CTE
http://www.foxnews.com/health/2017/...rry-johnson-believes-hes-living-with-cte.html
Are we one of the best teams? Can we win the championship?
I have been hearing the commercials on 610 and I'm so tempted to check it out. If only I understood the sport! lol
I bought a rugby game for my PS4 awhile back hoping it would teach me, but it apparently assumes you already know the sport because there is no tutorial.
I always think of American Football as being rugby but with one forward pass allowed. In rugby you can't pass forward at all.my interpretation is that Rugby is european&american combined football where anything goes
I have been hearing the commercials on 610 and I'm so tempted to check it out. If only I understood the sport! lol
I bought a rugby game for my PS4 awhile back hoping it would teach me, but it apparently assumes you already know the sport because there is no tutorial.
Study Finds All Hits, Not Just Those Causing Concussions, Cause CTE
Bad news for young football players: Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy — better known as CTE — can develop in brains after impact to the head without a person having suffered a concussion, a new study finds.
Researchers from the Boston University School of Medicine say that early indicators of CTE, a condition typically associated with athletes who have dealt with numerous concussions, were still present in people even though they’d never been diagnosed with the dangerous brain injury. They discovered early signs of CTE even spread throughout the brain after impact.
Full article
Sobering read.
American football will have to adapt somehow. I don't know how, other than flag football, but they'll eventually (and slowly) adapt somehow.
American football will have to adapt somehow. I don't know how, other than flag football, but they'll eventually (and slowly) adapt somehow.
True, but at what point are those impacts hard enough to cause an issue? There certainly wasn't enough velocity/kinetic energy when I played in youth football. I'd call it borderline, even in middle school.I predict that eventual minimum age will be 14, or basically HS. It might take a generation, but the more science studies it, the more we realize the long term damage being done to young, developing minds.
True, but at what point are those impacts hard enough to cause an issue? There certainly wasn't enough velocity/kinetic energy when I played in youth football. I'd call it borderline, even in middle school.
Not sure about you, but I'm holding up one on each hand. :PAre you sure you're OK? How many fingers am I holding up?
True, but at what point are those impacts hard enough to cause an issue? There certainly wasn't enough velocity/kinetic energy when I played in youth football. I'd call it borderline, even in middle school.
Not exactly.IMO, it is the untrained / unqualified 'dad coaches' that teach kids to hit each other in the earholes that is part of the problem with youth football. I was a bit shocked by some of the scenes in Friday Night Tykes, and later learned from other dads that it was quite common with their youth league experiences.
My son didn't want to play until 7th grade, and we were glad for that. At least we had real coaches instructing him, and we spoke with several at the parent orientation to find out if they are teaching a 'heads up' technique (they did) and other tackling fundamentals.
It seems like ESPN highlights are driving a lot of the bad form tackling and throwing bodies head first at ball carriers.
As far as your question, science is already on it:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/11/171127091135.htm
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/19/sports/football/tackle-football-brain-youth.html
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2016/10/football-kids-heads/504863/
Same study from link directly above. Same 25 kids.
Not exactly.
26 Kids. DMN changes seen, but no associated testing to validate effects. No conclusions drawn.
Then if you read the study..."Participants received telephone-administered cognitive tests and completed online measures of depression, behavioral regulation, apathy and executive functioning (initiating activity, problem-solving, planning and organization)." To say I think their testing methodology is woefully inadequate is an understatement.
"I asked him if this means people should stop letting kids play football, and he said no, which was surprising. I would never let my kid play football, and I don’t even have a kid. Stitzel’s argument is that there’s not definitive proof that youth football is bad for most kids." So, a non-objective writer who still can't believe that there's no definitive proof when told by the researcher himself.
It references the exact same study from the 2nd link.
25-kid study "Just as important, Whitlow said, are the questions unresolved by the study.
"Do these changes persist over time or do they just simply go away? Do you get more changes with more seasons of play? And most importantly, do these changes result in any kind of long-term change in function like memory or attention or anything that would be important in your ability to function day to day?"
Same study from link directly above. Same 25 kids.
Playing Tackle Football Before Age 12 Leads To CTE Symptoms Much Earlier
Playing tackle football before the age of 12 could lead to an earlier onset of cognitive and emotional symptoms of Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE), according to the findings of new study.
Researchers at the Boston University Medical School and the VA Boston Healthcare System analyzed 211 former football players who were diagnosed after death with CTE and other, similar neurodegenerative brain diseases. Researchers compiled data for the study through phone interviews with family and friends connected to individuals examined in the study. The interviews allowed the authors to assess when, if at all, symptoms of CTE first became noticeable in the players.
The authors found that players who started playing tackle football before the age of 12 saw cognitive, behavioral, and mood symptoms of CTE begin well before other players — an astounding average of 13 years earlier. The study showed that for every one year earlier the players started playing football than their peers, cognitive symptoms started to show 2.4 years earlier, and behavioral and mood symptoms 2.5 years earlier.
“Youth exposure to repetitive head impacts in tackle football may reduce one’s resiliency to brain diseases later in life, including, but not limited to CTE,” explains corresponding author Ann McKee, chief of Neuropathology at Boston VA Healthcare System and director of BU’s CTE Center, in a media release. “It makes common sense that children, whose brains are rapidly developing, should not be hitting their heads hundreds of times per season.”
Full article
The link to the recent study is not to the "full study." It is a summary abstract of the study.
Reading the actual study makes it clear that the information utilized to obtain conclusions are not much more than telephone interviews of the deceased players' family and friends. Even first hand telephone interviews/surveys of patients themselves are not considered high quality information for medical studies. Accuracy in such information gathering is negatively affected by too many factors, not least of which is the interviewees' own potentially compromised detailed memory recall and/or their own potentially deficient cognitive level.
The study further demonstrates that although age of first exposure to tackle football was associated with early onset of cognitive and emotional problems, it was not associated with worse overall severity of CTE pathology, Alzheimer's disease pathology or other pathology. In addition, earlier symptom onset was not restricted to those diagnosed with CTE. The relationship was similar for the former football players without CTE who had cognitive or behavioral and mood changes that may have been related to other diseases. The control group in this study is by far poorly structured and not reflective of a study with high validity. And finally the question the study still leaves is would these behavioral "changes" in these players not have shown up even if they did not play football since many younger players seem to have an attraction to the aggressiveness of the game.
Again, this study leaves too many questions to be reflexively acted upon by parents. Future studies will have to be much more controlled and will call for players to be followed real time from cradle to casket to attain the valid information and conclusions that medical science requires.
NFL players that go onto significant brain pathology and symptoms unseen with segments of the normal aging population still seems the exception. Studies that have attempted to demonstrate otherwise thus far have been poorly controlled and have been filled with selection bias. Years of partying, alcohol and drugs (including narcotics) further confound the picture, since all of these factors have been associated with mood disorders, memory loss, dementia and Alzheimer's. Meanwhile, we will continue to search for definitive answers.CnnnD, Roger Staubach was concussed more times than I think anyone really counted, yet he's maintained his faculties and prospered in life, looks healthy as a horse when he does make a TV appearance and can still sling a football with some authority even at his age. So how is it that someone like him avoided the late in life damage?
NFL players that go onto significant brain pathology and symptoms unseen with segments of the normal aging population still seems the exception. Studies that have attempted to demonstrate otherwise thus far have been poorly controlled and have been filled with selection bias. Years of partying, alcohol and drugs (including narcotics) further confound the picture. Meanwhile, we will continue to search for definitive answers.
I have reviewed the actual papers on CTE. Although, the relationships may on there face seem reasonable, I like other segments of the medical community feel that we just don’t have solid evidence yet that repeated concussions or sub-concussive hits actually cause CTE. All of these studies, including the recent one that concluded that repeated nonconcussive hits in youthful brains could lead to CTE, have very significant flaws with measuring baselines, containing biases in selection and most of all the very questionable choice (type) and numbers of controls. Especially, when dealing with youngsters, evaluation techniques and interpretations are variable and controversial. We know that the young brain is more susceptible to brain changes due to trauma, but there is also evidence that the young brain has increased compensatory and reparative properties. In fact, it has recently been discovered that in brains which are still actively growing, the remaining part of the brain can reorganize itself to control some functions that the damaged portion would have governed.
With all this said, I am not saying that concussive or even subconcussive events cannot result in CTE.............only that the presented "evidence" has far from proved it..........and has left many question as to the validity of such a conclusion
Merril Hoge, co-author of new book are way off target in discussing football, CTE
In their op-ed, Hoge and Cummings call the evidence of football causing CTE “pseudoscience,” laying out their case by saying that McKee’s 2017 bombshell study that found signs of CTE in 110 out of 111 brains of former NFL players had no control group as a comparison — no brains, say, from people who did not play football.
The only problem with that contention is that a 2015 Mayo Clinic study co-authored by McKee tested the brains of 198 individuals who had no exposure to contact sports in their lives — and not a single one of those 198 brains showed signs of CTE.
To recap: CTE was present in the brains of 110 out of 111 ex-NFL players, and in the brains of zero out of 198 people who did not play contact sports.
“I’m happy to ask Merril Hoge who to draft No. 1 next year,” Chris Nowinski, Ph.D., CEO of the Concussion Legacy Foundation, said in a phone interview, “but we shouldn’t be asking him how to design research studies.”