Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Rams Huddle › CTE Study Finds Evidence of Brain Disease in 110 Out of 111 Former NFL Players
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July 26, 2017 at 11:29 am #71272
zn
ModeratorCTE Study Finds Evidence of Brain Disease in 110 Out of 111 Former NFL Players
CHICAGO — Research on 202 former football players found evidence of brain disease in nearly all of them, from athletes in the NFL, college and even high school.
It’s the largest update on chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, a brain disease linked with repeated head blows.
But the report doesn’t confirm that the condition is common in all football players; it reflects high occurrence in samples at a Boston brain bank that studies CTE. Many donors or their families contributed because of the players’ repeated concussions and troubling symptoms before death.
“There are many questions that remain unanswered,” said lead author Dr. Ann McKee, a Boston University neuroscientist. That includes, “how common is this” in the general population and all football players?
“How many years of football is too many?” and “What is the genetic risk? Some players do not have evidence of this disease despite long playing years,” she noted.
It’s also uncertain if some players’ lifestyle habits — alcohol, drugs, steroids, diet — might somehow contribute, McKee said.
Dr. Munro Cullum, a neuropsychologist at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, emphasized that the report is based on a selective sample of men who were not necessarily representative of all football players. He said problems other than CTE might explain some of their most common symptoms before death — depression, impulsivity and behavior changes. He was not involved in the report.
McKee said research from the brain bank may lead to answers and an understanding of how to detect the disease in life, “while there’s still a chance to do something about it.” There’s no known treatment.
The strongest scientific evidence says CTE can only be diagnosed by examining brains after death, although some researchers are experimenting with tests performed on the living. Many scientists believe that repeated blows to the head increase risks for developing CTE, leading to progressive loss of normal brain matter and an abnormal buildup of a protein called tau. Combat veterans and athletes in rough contact sports like football and boxing are among those thought to be most at risk.
Lead author Dr. Ann McKee, a Boston University neuroscientist, studies brain samples of former football players. Courtesy Journal of the American Medical Association
Related: For First Time, NFL Acknowledges Link Between Football and Brain DisordersThe new report was published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
CTE was diagnosed in 177 former players — or nearly 90 percent of brains studied. That includes 110 of 111 brains from former NFL players; 48 of 53 college players; nine of 14 semi-professional players, seven of eight Canadian Football league players and three of 14 high school players. The disease was not found in brains from two younger players.
A panel of neuropathologists made the diagnosis by examining brain tissue, using recent criteria from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, McKee said.
The NFL issued a statement saying these reports are important for advancing science related to head trauma and said the league “will continue to work with a wide range of experts to improve the health of current and former NFL athletes.”
After years of denials, the NFL acknowledged a link between head blows and brain disease and agreed in a $1 billion settlement to compensate former players who had accused the league of hiding the risks.
The journal update includes many previously reported cases, including former NFL players Bubba Smith, Ken Stabler, Junior Seau and Dave Duerson.
New ones include retired tight end Frank Wainright, whose 10-year NFL career included stints with the Miami Dolphins, New Orleans Saints and Baltimore Ravens. Wainright died last October at age 48 from a heart attack triggered by bleeding in the brain, said his wife, Stacie. She said he had struggled almost eight years with frightening symptoms including confusion, memory loss and behavior changes.
Wainright played before the league adopted stricter safety rules and had many concussions, she said. He feared CTE and was adamant about donating his brain, she said.
“A lot of families are really tragically affected by it — not even mentioning what these men are going through and they’re really not sure what is happening to them. It’s like a storm that you can’t quite get out of,” his wife said.
Frank Wycheck, another former NFL tight end, said he worries that concussions during his nine-year career — the last seven with the Tennessee Titans — have left him with CTE and he plans to donate his brain to research.
“Some people have heads made of concrete, and it doesn’t really affect some of those guys,” he said. “But CTE is real.”
“I know I’m suffering through it, and it’s been a struggle and I feel for all the guys out there that are going through this,” said Wycheck, 45.
In the new report, McKee and colleagues found the most severe disease in former professional players; mild disease was found in all three former high school players diagnosed with the disease. Brain bank researchers previously reported that the earliest known evidence of CTE was found in a high school athlete who played football and other sports who died at age 18. He was not included in the current report.
The average age of death among all players studied was 66. There were 18 suicides among the 177 diagnosed.
July 26, 2017 at 12:47 pm #71275zn
ModeratorCTE was nearly ubiquitous among former NFL players who donated their brains to science
The NFL issued a statement saying the league “will continue to work with a wide range of experts to improve the health of current and former NFL athletes.”
http://www.latimes.com/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-football-cte-brain-20170725-story.html
In a group of more than 100 professional football players whose brains were examined after their death, new research has found that virtually all suffered from chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a condition likely brought on by repeated blows to the head.
At a Boston University program that investigates the trauma-linked brain disease, researchers found that, of 111 former players for the National Football League who donated their brains for post-mortem examination, 110 bore the distinctive tangles, plaques and protein clumps now recognized as the neural hallmarks of CTE.
In life, all had suffered at least one of a range of behavioral symptoms — from mood instability and impulsiveness to substance abuse and aggression — that appeared to vary according to an athlete’s age at death, duration of participation in football and level of play. And the loved ones of the majority of the study’s participants told researchers that symptoms of CTE had worsened over the course of the participant’s life.
In nearly 9 out of 10 of those professional athletes — 86% — researchers found the telltale brain abnormalities of CTE were extensive, varied and scattered throughout the brain.
The report, published Tuesday in the journal JAMA, relates the accumulated findings from researchers’ post-mortem examinations of 202 brains, all donated by former football players or their families. Of those, researchers found clear evidence of CTE in 177, or 87.6%, of the brains they examined.
On average, those 177 athletes had played football for 15 years.
From kitchen tables to NFL owners’ boxes, the new report is likely to raise new concerns about the costs to players of a sport that, at its highest levels, has been a showcase for violent hits. As parents have fled the sidelines of youth football, taking their children with them, the NFL has changed rules in a bid to make the game safer, and has acknowledged a link between repeated concussions and players’ impairment. Payouts in a long-running suit by injured players against the NFL were approved last month.
In a statement issued Tuesday, NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said “we appreciate the work done by Dr. McKee and her colleagues.”
The study leaves “many unanswered questions relating to the cause, incidence and prevalence of long-term effects of head trauma,” he added. But the NFL “is committed to supporting scientific research into CTE and advancing progress in the prevention and treatment of head injuries,” he said, citing the League’s commitment in 2016 to spend $100 million to support medical research and engineering advancements on brain science.
The study’s authors, led by Boston University neuropathologist Ann McKee, cautioned that the study does not suggest severe traumatic brain damage would be found so widely in all who have played football.
“These numbers are very startling and very high, but this is a skewed sample,” McKee told The Times.
The 202 brains examined in the study are called a “convenience sample.” They were donated, typically, by families who had witnessed troubling symptoms that often progressed among players. In many cases of suicide, for instance, donor families strongly suspected that trauma-related brain damage had led to their loved one’s death. And most had played football much longer than is typical, often starting young and continuing to play well into their 20s, McKee said.
Suicide was the most common cause of death among those diagnosed in the study with mild CTE, accounting for 27% of those deaths. The most common causes of death among those diagnosed with severe CTE were degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. Close to half — 47% — of those with signs of severe CTE died of those causes.
In addition, the study did not compare the brains in the convenience sample to the brains of former football players chosen randomly or those who had no neuropsychiatric symptoms.
Not all the study’s participants played football professionally, and the findings of CTE also weren’t limited to NFL players.
Fourteen of the 202 donated brains came from football players who either did not live or did not play past high school, and three of those were found to have CTE.
Fifty-three of the study’s brains were donated by men who had played football at the collegiate level, and CTE was found in 48 of those.
Of 14 participants who had played semiprofessional football, nine had CTE. And seven of eight men who had played in the Canadian Football League were found to have the condition.
Neither of two brains that came from donors who had stopped playing football before high school showed signs of CTE.
Half of all the 202 donors whose brains were examined had died before they were 66 and half after their 66th birthday. Researchers concluded that, over the whole sample, the severity of CTE tracked closely with the age at which the subject died, with older donors showing, on average, the clearest and most extensive signs of CTE.
Researchers distinguished between brains with “mild” pathology — 44 of the 177 that showed signs of CTE — and those with “severe” levels of the disease’s structural hallmarks — 133 of the 177 brains examined. On average, those with mild CTE had played football for 13 years. Those found to have severe abnormalities had played football for an average of 15.8 years.
The authors of the study found no clear patterns in players’ positions — offensive and defensive linemen and running backs were most prominently represented in the sample and among those diagnosed with CTE. McKee said some of the patterns researchers did discern ran counter to expectations and will be fodder for important ongoing research.
For instance, many of the men whose families reported the most problematic symptoms, including mood disturbances, explosiveness and self-harm, were found to have only mild levels of CTE’s distinctive brain abnormalities, McKee said.
“We wondered whether there’s another pathology we’re not capturing in the data set,” McKee said — factors that, after trauma, might jump-start brain damage, exacerbate it or simply facilitate its spread across the brain. Possibilities include inflammation, the shearing of the fibers that lash neurons together or damage to the brain’s white matter — the fatty bundles of tissue that carry electrical signals among regions and hemispheres.
“We’ve been looking for eight years but don’t think we’ve captured a way to measure” all the possible factors that make CTE progress, McKee said. “At some point, there appears to be a progression — at least families complain of progression — and there appears to be a progression after the person has retired from the sport.”
Why, how and how much CTE progresses “remains one of the mysteries of this disease,” McKee said. “We think it’s stimulated by trauma, but how it’s self-perpetuating is unknown.”
Among the other potential contributing factors: age at first exposure to football and cumulative hits — both of which are under study elsewhere.
McKee said there’s growing evidence that early blows to the head may prove to be especially harmful — a suspicion suggesting that for youth players, a later start for tackle football might be a way to reduce damage. At the very least, she said, it would limit a player’s lifelong exposure to head injuries.
“I believe everyone needs to make their own decisions, given their own personal circumstances,” McKee added. “But I’d definitely encourage athletes to participate in sports that don’t involve head contact, and if they do, to try to adopt manners of play that reduce that impact.”
Limiting contact is an easy approach, McKee said, and taking helmets off for practice is known to change the style of play and reduce blows to the head.
“No head injury is good for you,” McKee said. But for athletes who have been injured, research dictates one absolute, she added: You have to leave the game long enough to recover.
“Injury of an unrecovered brain is very damaging,” she said.
July 28, 2017 at 6:47 pm #71391zn
ModeratorNFL to End Partnership with National Institutes of Health on Concussion Study
Alec Nathan
The National Institutes of Health will reportedly let its partnership with the NFL expire in August after the NFL previously pledged $30 million to help research the connection between brain disease and football.
According to ESPN’s Mark Fainaru-Wada and Steve Fainaru, the NIH decided not to renew its agreement with the NFL “following a bitter dispute in 2015 in which the NFL backed out of a major study that had been awarded to a researcher who had been critical of the league.”
“The NFL’s agreement with [the funding arm of the NIH] ends August 31, 2017, and there are no current research plans for the funds remaining from the original $30 million NFL commitment,” the NIH said in a statement, per ESPN.
Confirmation of the severed relationship between the NFL and NIH comes two days after the Washington Post’s Mark Maske reported Democratic members of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce submitted a letter to the NFL asking if it planned to fulfill the terms of its donation.
According to Maske, the NFL has still not contributed $18 million of the initial amount pledged in 2012.
“We are currently engaged in constructive discussions with the FINH regarding potential new research projects and the remaining funds of our $30 million commitment,” the NFL said Wednesday in a statement provided to Bleacher Report by CNN’s Jill Martin. “In September 2016, the NFL pledged $100 million in support for independent medical research and engineering advancements in neuroscience-related topics. This is in addition to the $100 million that the NFL and its partners are already spending on medical and neuroscience research.”
The relationship between the NFL and NIH has reportedly been contentious for years.
According to a May 2016 investigation by the New York Times’ John Branch, the House Committee on Energy and Commerce conducted a study that detailed the NFL’s attempt to influence where its donation was funneled.
“Our investigation has shown that while the NFL had been publicly proclaiming its role as funder and accelerator of important research, it was privately attempting to influence that research,” the committee wrote. “The NFL attempted to use its ‘unrestricted gift’ as leverage to steer funding away from one of its critics.”
On Tuesday, the medical journal JAMA (via CNN’s Daniella Emanuel) published the results of a study that showed chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) had been found in the brains of 110 of 111 deceased former NFL players.
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