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    22
    Jan
    2013
    3:37pm, EST

    Game change: Brain scans offer new view of NFL concussions

    Chronic traumatic encephalopathy could only be found after death – until now. Researchers at Evanston's NorthShore Neurological Institute and UCLA discovered brain scans of five former NFL players who had at least one concussion on the field showed more tau protein than healthy men of the same age. NBC's Dr. Nancy Snyderman reports.

    Like anyone else who is getting a little older, former NFL player Wayne Clark sometimes forgets someone’s name. But unlike most people, Clark has an extra reason to worry -- as a retired  football player, he’s had more than his fair share of knocks and is now nervously watching report after report linking concussions with a brain condition known as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).

    “Recalling names, which I recall used to be pretty easy for me, and now I go through stages where I think ‘Why can’t I remember that’?  I always wondered are these age-related or are they concussion-related?” Clark, 65, says.

    A new study using brain scans might be able to answer that question. The technique may allow scientists to peer into the brains of the living and spot signs of the abnormally tangled clumps of a protein called "tau" that can cause such symptoms as memory loss, impulse control, mood volatility and, eventually, dementia in people with CTE.

    Researchers from the University of California, Los Angeles, used the new technique to scan the brains of five former NFL players 45 and older, along with five healthy men of the same age, according to a preliminary report published Tuesday in the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry.

    The hope is that studies like this will enable scientists to better understand CTE, says Dr. Gary Small, director of the UCLA Longevity Center, who led the study.

    “Then maybe we will be able to detect it sooner and possibly come up with a preventive treatment rather than trying to repair what is damaged,” Small says.

    A study of five people doesn’t say much about what might be found in a larger population. But Small and his colleagues are encouraged by what they've seen.

    Each of the football players in the study had a history of one or more diagnosed concussions and several had cognitive and/or mood symptoms. The players represented a wide range of positions: linebacker, quarterback, guard, center, and defensive lineman.

    At the outset, the players were asked to fill out questionnaires designed to detect signs of cognitive decline and mood symptoms.

    To look for signs of CTE, Small and his colleagues injected each study volunteer with a newly developed radio tracer that locks on to the tau protein and shows up in bright colors ranging from red to yellow on PET scans.

    The scans from the healthy non-players showed no signs of tau build-up, but the images from the players showed a range that correlated with the number of hits they’d sustained during their football careers.

    UCLA

    Brain scans of living former NFL players show evidence of the damage linked to a brain-destroying condition called CTE, researchers said on Tuesday.

    Though the researchers had asked 19 players initially to participate in the study, only five were willing, Small says. And only one was willing to have his name released to the public. That was Clark, a former quarterback for the San Diego Chargers.

    Clark, who had sustained only one concussion while playing football, didn’t have much evidence of tau build-up. But he did have some.

    “And when I first saw the scan I thought, whoa, that looks pretty extensive,” Clark says in an video interview on UCLA's website.

    “Wayne’s scans show the abnormal protein deposits, just like the other football players in the study,” Small says. “Now he's in his mid-60s and he has very minor memory complaints, which could be part of normal aging, but they also could be related to his concussion. When we do further studies, we’ll be able to find out if there’s a solid connection between the two.”

    Clark hopes the research will help doctors eventually identify which players might be at risk of developing permanent brain damage. “My hope is that this study will help diagnose the condition before a player dies and is autopsied,” Clark says. "If we can diagnose it when a player is alive, then we can learn how best to intervene and how to improve equipment and rules and practice habits to we can make the game safer.”

    It’s not just NFL players. Brain injuries are common among war veterans, victims of accidents and younger athletes.

    The researchers don’t completely understand the relationship between tau deposits and jolts to the head. Clark’s scan suggests that one hit might possibly lead to some accumulation of the abnormal protein -- just not enough to lead to symptoms.

    “We don’t know how many hits it takes,” says Dr. Joseph Maroon, a professor of neurosurgery at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, and team neurosurgeon for the Pittsburgh Steelers. He was not involved in this study. “We don’t know if one severe hit can lead to this progression. Some players can get thousands of hits and never develop CTE. There are millions of football players in high school, college, and pro level who have taken multiple blows to the head and not developed CTE.”

    Another unresolved question is whether multiple “sub-concussive” hits, such as those sustained by linemen on every play, can lead to CTE.

    Perhaps the biggest question scientists hope to solve with this type of research is what percentage of concussed players end up with CTE.

    Many believe that there is a genetic component that can make a person more susceptible and that those with resilient genetics can take a number of jolts to the brain without developing the disease.

    Though most of the former NFL players’ brains autopsied up to this point have shown signs of CTE, those brains have come from players who tended to have pronounced symptoms of the disease before their deaths.

    Two years ago when former football star Dave Duerson committed suicide, he left a note explaining that he’d decided to shoot himself in the chest, rather than the head, so scientists might examine his brain to see if the concussions he’d suffered in his 11-year NFL career as a hard-hitting safety for the Chicago Bears, the New York Giants and the Phoenix Cardinals could explain the symptoms that were making his life a misery.

    Thus far, Boston University’s Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy has found evidence of CTE in the autopsied brains of 33 former NFL players, including that of Duerson, according to a report published in December in an early online version of the journal Brain.

    Some hope that the new research is just the beginning.

    “This is a step forward and it emphasizes the importance of what PET scanning might hold as we go forward in trying to diagnose the condition [in living players],” says Maroon.

    Maroon and others say they believe that CTE is the result of a normal inflammatory response to brain injury that runs amok. The theory is that the inflammation switch gets turned on and stays on in people with a certain genetic predisposition, Maroon says.

    “One might conjecture that it’s like starting a small brush fire in a dry forest,” Maroon said. “If the predisposition is there and the fire is lit, then it may continue inexorably.”

    Maroon hopes that new radio tracers will be found that highlight the early signs of inflammation before tau has even begun to accumulate. Then there might be a chance to find therapies that stop CTE from developing, he says. 

    See more NBC Health news: 

    • Contact sports leave pattern of brain injuries, study finds
    • US launches study into youth sports concussions

    42 comments

    Great now we cand find out what causes Tea Party Syndrome!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: nfl, football, concussion, alzheimers
  • 1
    Dec
    2012
    4:13pm, EST

    Deaf football team brings motivation to the field

    From Fremont, Calif., 19 players and the coach on this small football team have brought grit and motivation to the field, using color coded signs and their own language to communicate. NBC's Mike Taibbi reports.

    By Mike Taibbi, NBC News correspondent

    It sounds like one of those “Hoosiers” stories: a small high school with undersized players and not even enough of those to fill out a full squad goes all the way! But the story of the 2012 CSD Eagles is better than that.

    That’s because ‘CSD’ stands for “California School for the Deaf.”

    Yep … all 19 players on the Eagles squad in Freemont, Calif., and head coach Warren Keller, are deaf.

    Think of it: Anyone who’s ever played or watched football knows that what often separates failure and mayhem from progress and escape is sound. The signals that are called, or changed at the last second:  the imminent arrival of an oncoming tackler, the exhortations and warnings of teammates and coaches.

    But the Eagles found a way to turn deafness into an asset. Using sign language and big color-coded sideline boards, they communicated instantaneously with each other in a language that was natural to them but incomprehensible to every public school opponent who took the field against them.

    And they preached speed in practice and during the actual games -- each snap no more than seven seconds from the referee’s spot of the ball. Talk about a quick strike offense -- opposing coaches found themselves mystified by the voiceless whirlwind of these smaller, quicker players who racked up 329 points in 11 games.

    Said one opposing coach, “They can talk to each other and don’t have to create a new language. As a matter of fact, we may be at a disadvantage.”

    And you have to appreciate the sports-as-a-laboratory-for-life part of this story. As coach Keller put it, “We want to prepare these kids the best we can for the rest of their lives.  No matter how hard we push them, we want to prepare them for real  life.”

    It goes without saying that real life is tough enough, growing up deaf. Overcoming that deficit takes extra work that never ends.

    It can seem like a burden, an unfair burden; but the Eagles coaches not only convinced their players to adopt the simplest of mottos: "Hard Work!" They showed the rewards available for anyone who bought in, over the course of a single season’s worth of football games.

    The kids brought motivation to the field, from their own histories.  

    “They think we’re nothing,” generalized linebacker Johnny Morales of the Eagles’ opponents. "That we can’t beat them.  And they have big egos.”

    “And then we shock them,” said receiver Zane Peterson, “when they realize deaf people can play.”

    And win.

    They were victorious in 10 games this season, all but two against public schools. League champions. Finalists for a special citation in Sports Illustrated’s “Sportsman of the Year” awards. All for young athletes who’d learned that proving their mettle and equality with the hearing world on the field of play can carry over for a lifetime.

    “What happens on the football field applies in real life,” said defensive back Trace Martin.   

    Johnny Morales added, “I’ll always remember playing football here, of course I will. It’s gonna help me be a better man.”  

    8 comments

    It's good to hear this. Now perhaps the rest of the country can lend an ear to this kind of endeavor.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: football, eagles, featured, mike-taibbi, deaf-football-team
  • 14
    Nov
    2011
    11:37am, EST

    Update: Yale QB to lead game against Harvard

    Last week, Nightly News profiled Yale University quarterback Patrick Witt, who faced a tough choice. On Nov. 19, Witt could either lead Yale against arch rival Harvard University in New Haven, Conn., or he could interview for the prestigious Rhodes Scholarship in his hometown of Atlanta.

    More than 20,000 of you voted in our poll. Fifty-eight percent of voters said Witt should choose the Rhodes interview over the football game. But Yale University now reports Witt has withdrawn his application for the scholarship and will be playing against Harvard on Saturday. 

    "My focus this week is solely on preparing for the Game alongside my teammates and coaches," said Witt, as quoted on Yale's football page.

    What is your reaction to Witt's decision?

    11 comments

    the Rhodes Scholarship is about charactor, honesty, commitment, and intellegence. I would prefer that the did the Rhodes... but he is doing the right thing... he has a commitment to his team mates, his coaches, and his school... by honoring his commitment he shows character... he'll go far... and ma …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: football, yale-university, rhodes-scholarship, patrick-witt
  • 7
    Nov
    2011
    11:50am, EST

    QB's dilemma: Harvard game or Rhodes interview

    On Nov. 19, Yale University quarterback Patrick Witt faces a tough choice: He can lead Yale against arch rival Harvard University in New Haven, Conn., or he can interview for the prestigious Rhodes Scholarship in Atlanta. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

    By Anne Thompson
    NBC News

    He runs a pro style offense for the Yale Bulldogs, but 22-year-old Patrick Witt is, in a real sense, an option quarterback. Or at least a quarterback with options any college senior would envy.

    Not only does Witt have a full-time job offer from Boston Consulting Group, but National Football League scouts are closely watching his games. One scouting website even projects Witt, the most accurate passer in Yale University history, will be selected in the sixth or seventh round of the NFL draft.

    But on Nov. 19, Witt faces a tough choice: He can lead Yale against arch rival Harvard University in New Haven, Conn., or he can interview for the prestigious Rhodes Scholarship in his hometown of Atlanta.

    On the one hand, the opportunity to be a Rhodes Scholar, Witt says, is tremendous. “And it is a difficult process. There are plenty of excellent candidates every year that aren’t selected, so that’s one part of it,” he said.

    On the other, the game against Harvard would be Witt’s last college game. “And I’ve invested a lot of time. This is a sport I’ve been playing since I was a kid.”

    Witt is not the first football player to face this dilemma. You might remember former Florida State University safety Myron Rolle, who faced a similar choice in 2008. Rolle, too, was a Rhodes finalist and had to interview for the scholarship in Birmingham, Ala. during the day, and try to make it for a crucial contest against Maryland in College Park, Md. He was able to do both because the Maryland game took place at night, and FSU had a private plane pick him up in Alabama. A police escort delivered Rolle to the game in Maryland. Rolle won the scholarship and FSU won the game.

    The timing this year is not in Witt's favor. The kickoff for the 128th meeting between Harvard and Yale is set for noon on Nov. 19. The Rhodes interview could take all day - that same day. Even if Witt got the first interview at 8 a.m. Saturday, he could still be called back in the afternoon for a follow-up conversation.  There have been offers of private planes, but with the possibility of a callback, they wouldn't help.

    Witt is a history major with a 3.91 grade point average. "Patrick rocks," said Dr. John Merriman, history professor, who wrote a Rhodes recommendation letter for Witt. Merriman said Witt earned an A plus in one of his courses during football season. 

    "Patrick, he's the only guy I've known here that -- male or female -- that's really a great athlete and a great scholar," Merriman said. 

    Witt's college career started at the University of Nebraska, where he had a four-year athletic scholarship as a quarterback for the Cornhuskers. While the football was challenging, Witt felt frustrated in the classroom.

    "I came [to Yale] as a finance major from Nebraska and completely changed my trajectory,” he said. “I became a history major, focused quite extensively on French history with Professor Merriman. It's those expansions of your horizons that I really sought in coming here and I've been able to do just that."  

    Yale does not offer athletic scholarships. Witt’s parents, Gene and Cathy, both commercial airline pilots, pay $55,000 a year for their son’s education.

    Witt wants to study international relations at Oxford University in England, in preparation for a career in politics. "At the end of the day, the best advice I've been given is ‘this is your decision and you have to do what's right for you,’” he said.

    The choice comes with no guarantees. If Witt opts for the Rhodes interview, he might not get the scholarship. If he opts for the game, Yale will be a decided underdog against a Harvard team that has not lost in the Ivy League this season. 

    "It's thrilling," Witt said, "but, again, it's a big dilemma."

    Learn more about Patrick Witt on Monday, Nov. 7 at 6:30 ET on Nightly News with Brian Williams.

    288 comments

    Really? A Rhodes interview cannot be rescheduled? What a shame that this young man must be compelled to make this choice.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: football, yale-university, rhodes-scholarship, patrick-witt, anne-thompson

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