That's according to some recent and troubling stories about brain injuries among former NFL players. The most detailed is the most disturbing: GQ's October 2009 article entitled Game Brain (available only through GQ's web site in a Very Clunky Format; soon to be available in LexisNexis & InfoTrac). Author Jeanne Marie Laskas interviews neuropathologist and self-proclaimed "brain chaser" Bennet Omalu in his quest to identify this new strain of "punch-drunk syndrome," formerly associated only with boxers. He calls it "gridiron dementia" in his readable and sobering book Play Hard, Die Young: Football Dementia, Depression, and Death.
Omalu named this disease strain chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) and published his findings in the journal Neurosurgery; Laskas notes that the article contained "scientific evidence that the kind of repeated blows to the head sustained in football could cause severe, debilitating brain damage." What Omalu found literally were "[b]rown and red splotches. All over the place. Large accumulations of tau proteins. Tau was kind of like sludge, clogging up the works, killing cells in regions responsible for mood, emotions, and executive functioning."
Laskas also spoke with Julian Bailes, a neurosurgeon of considerable renown who had for a decade worked as a Pittsburgh Steelers team doctor. Bailes, chairman of neurosurgery at West Virginia University Hospitals, who was the first to tell Omalu that he believed in his research. The GQ article details both the medical quest to identify and the political issues as Omalu, et al. try to convince the NFL of their findings.
Since it's football season, there are some other articles about this as well, including one from last month's New York Times and today's New Yorker.
For More Information
- Carpenter, Les. 'Brain Chaser' Tackles Effects of NFL Hits Washington Post, April 25, 2007.
- Gladwell, Malcolm. Football, Dog Fighting, and Brain Damage The New Yorker, Oct. 19, 2009.
- Laskas, Jeanne Marie. Game Brain. GQ. October, 2009.
- Omalu Bennet, et al. Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy in a National Football League Player. Neurosurgery. 57(1):128-134, July 2005.
- ----. Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy in a National Football League Player: part II. Neurosurgery. 59(5):1086-1093, November 2006.
- Omalu, Bennett. Play Hard, Die Young: Football Dementia, Depression, and Death. Lodi, Calif. : Neo-Forenxis Books, 2008.
- Schwarz, Alan. Dementia Risk Seen in Players in N.F.L. Study. New York Times, September 29, 2009.
Additional Info:
- Study Links Concussions To Brain Disease 60 Minutes - CBS News, Oct. 11, 2009.
- Fatsis, Stefan. Health Care Reform ... for the N.F.L. New York Times Op-Ed, Oct. 11, 2009.
- New York Times Fifth Down Blog, Malcolm Gladwell on Concussions, and the Gagliardi Solution Oct. 18, 2009
2 comments:
60 Minutes also did a story on this last night where you can see the damage done to the brain.
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=5377319n&tag=api
Kind of scary to imagine.
Gary
From a neuropathologist's perspective:
http://neuropathologyblog.blogspot.com/2009/10/should-football-be-illegal.html
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