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Concussions in American football

Concussions and play-related head blows in American football have been shown to be the cause of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), which has led to player deaths and other debilitating symptoms after retirement, including memory loss, depression, anxiety, headaches, stress, and sleep disturbances.[1]

The list of ex-NFL players that have either been diagnosed post-mortem with CTE or have reported symptoms of CTE continues to grow.[2][3] According to Boston University, CTE is a brain degenerative disease found in athletes, military veterans, and others with history of repetitive brain trauma. Although CTE is highly controversial and misunderstood, it is believed that a protein called Tau forms clumps that slowly spread throughout the brain, killing brain cells.

There is also theoretical research that suggests early CTE might result from damaged blood vessels within the brain. That could trigger brain inflammation and, eventually, the development of proteins such as Tau believed to play a key role in CTE. This hypothesis was tested on adult mice; the researchers state that their brains possess similar attributes to that of human brains. Using a special device, the mice were given precise impacts that would lead to mild brain traumas similar to what an athlete would suffer in contact sports. The mice, whose brains were scanned using a specialized MRI, immediately showed changes to the electrical functions of their brains.[4]

According to 2017 study on brains of deceased gridiron football players, 99% of tested brains of NFL players, 88% of CFL players, 64% of semi-professional players, 91% of college football players, and 21% of high school football players had various stages of CTE.[5]

Other common injuries include, injuries of legs, arms, neck and lower back.[6][7][8][9]

NFL concussions edit

Efforts are being made within the NFL to address concussions and promote player safety. The league has made progress in recent years in reducing concussive injuries. The NFL is committed to addressing these issues and making improvements wherever possible by actively working to reduce the risk of head injuries and make the game safer for players.[10]

There has been a persisting concern regarding concussions in the NFL, particularly as former players come forward with experiences related to these injuries. Research has indicated that repeated head trauma can have a significant impact on behavior and cognitive function. [11]

The number of reported concussions in the National Football League (NFL) has increased by 18% since 2022.[12] Some experts believe this trend should be reversed, citing technological advancements and helmet studies. It has been suggested that the NFL modify its helmets to reduce concussions.[13]

If a player displays or reports symptoms of a concussion or stinger (a nerve pinch injury) after a blow to the head, they must follow NFL protocol. Various individuals, including the team athletic trainer, booth ATC spotter, team physician, game official, coach, teammate, sideline Unaffiliated Neurotrauma Consultant (UNC), or booth UNC, can initiate the protocol.[14]

History edit

 
1908 cartoon (by W.C. Morris) highlighting the dangers that were associated with the sport

Concussions are frequent injuries among football players. Concussions occur when the head is subject to a large impact force, resulting in a minor brain injury. There has been a growing concern about concussions since the early 1900s. In 1906, a Harvard student-athlete died from a head injury and the team doctors released a report titled "The Physical Aspect of American Football" in the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal describing the type, severity, and number of injuries the team sustained in the 1905 season.[15]

The NFL first began to review the subject formally in 1994, then NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue approved the creation of the Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (MTBI) Committee with the stated goal of studying the effects of concussions and sub-concussive injury in NFL players. Tagliabue appointed rheumatologist Elliot Pellman to chair the committee.[16] Pellman's appointment was met with harsh criticism, because he is not a neurologist or neuropsychologist and often admitted ignorance about head injuries.[16] The concussion data collected by the league from 1996 to 2001 has been shown to understate the actual number of diagnosed concussions by ten percent. The league additionally relied on legal counsel who were actively involved in downplaying health risks in the tobacco industry.[17]

The same year, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) reported a statistically significant increase in the risk of neurological disorders such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) in retired football players, which furthered public knowledge about the risk of long-term neurocognitive disease related to repeated head impacts.[18] Despite the NIOSH study, Pellman and the MTBI Committee drew their own conclusions that continued to contradict these findings and those of other organizations. Biomechanical engineers and neurosurgeons informed the Committee that the helmet safety standard at that time was insufficient to minimize the risk of concussions.[19]

The MTBI Committee began studying the nature of tackle plays resulting in concussive impacts and developing its own biomechanical analysis of the effect of these forces on the brain.[20] It started publishing study results in 2003 that stated there were no long-term negative health consequences associated with concussions sustained by NFL players. A six-year study by the Committee concluded that, "Players who are concussed and return to the same game have fewer initial signs and symptoms than those removed from play. Return to play does not involve a significant risk of a second injury either in the same game or during the season."[21]

Research edit

Other organizations continued to publish study results that linked repeated concussions and long-term health problems contrary to reports by the MTBI Committee. A 2003 report by the Center for the Study of Retired Athletes at the University of North Carolina, for example, found a connection between numerous concussions and depression among former professional football players. Further, the center's follow-up study in 2005 associated both brain impairment and Alzheimer's disease with retired NFL players who had histories of concussions.[22]

A 2004 doctoral dissertation by Don Brady examined NFL Players' knowledge of concussions, studying both active and retired National Football League Players' knowledge of concussions. Brady's findings concluded: that many NFL players lacked accurate and essential knowledge pertaining to various aspects of a concussion; that the preponderance of credible experimental and clinical evidence pertaining to the adverse effects of concussion indicates that the brain is injured as a result of a concussion; that the altered cell functioning and cell death along with subtle to more visible neurological, neurocognitive, psychological, and other medical problems reflect a diverse range of lifelong negative consequences of a concussion / brain injury; and that sports team health-care personnel need to focus primarily on the athletes' health and well-being, and not minimize an injury or primarily concentrate on the players' capacity to perform on the field. This expanded focus of health care is necessary in order to avoid any real or perceived conflicts of interest emerging in the concussion research, concussion management and related return to play decision-making process.[23]

During November 2014, Brady filed objections to the proposed NFL concussion settlement offer. Brady sent a cover letter and detailed objections on behalf of NFL retired players to the presiding US district court judge, Anita Brody.[24]

In addition to the studies that continued to contradict the work of the MTBI Committee, renowned experts and sports journalists wrote critical reviews of the committee's studies. Robert Cantu of the American College of Sports Medicine noted bias in the committee's extremely small sample size and held that no conclusions should be drawn from the NFL's studies. In an ESPN Magazine article titled "Doctor Yes," Peter Keating criticized Pellman and the MTBI Committee's work and argued that the "... Committee has drawn a number of important conclusions about head trauma and how to treat it that contradict the research and experiences of many other doctors who treat sports concussions, not to mention the players who have suffered them."[16]

More studies continued to associate repetitive head injuries with neurological problems later in life. Kevin Guskiewicz, Director of the Center for the Study of Retired Athletes in the Department of Exercise and Sport Science at the University of North Carolina, analyzed data from a 2007 study of nearly 2,500 former NFL players. He found about 11 percent of the study participants suffered from clinical depression, with a threefold increased risk in former players who had a history of three or four concussions.[25] The following year, the NFL commissioned the University of Michigan Institute for Social Research to conduct a study involving more than 1,000 former NFL players. The results reported that Alzheimer's disease or similar diseases appear to have been diagnosed in former NFL players vastly more often than in the general population at a rate of 19 times the normal rate for men ages 30 through 49. The NFL responded to these results by claiming the study was incomplete.[26]

On September 30, 2014, researchers with Boston University announced that in autopsies of 79 brains of former NFL players, 76 had tested positive for CTE.[27] As of January 2017, that number had grown to 90 out of 94.[28] A study published in The Journal of the American Medical Association in July 2017 showed that 110 of 111 former NFL players whose brains were examined were found to have suffered from CTE.[29]

Effects of concussions edit

Concussions are a large issue in the NFL. Many findings suggest that the onset of dementia-related symptoms are initiated by repetitive cerebral concussions in professional football players.

CTE and other issues have been a very serious issue being caused by severe brain damage in football. ESPN states that "The brain of former Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Jovan Belcher -- the 25-year-old player who shot and killed his girlfriend in 2012 before committing suicide -- showed signs of pervasive brain damage like that found in other deceased NFL players, according to a neuropathologist."

Helmets edit

In the article, Sports Law and Governance, it talks about how over 2,000 former NFL players are dealing with concussions later on in life. The players are complaining and the league is getting sued for how the helmets have led players to have severe lifelong brain damage. The NFL has been responding with a new "HIT" system helping players not get these problems so easily.[30]

Wildman, a sports scientist shows how much of an ongoing criticism is about NFL helmets and just helmets in general. The NFL finally acknowledged the negative impact concussions have on its billion-dollar business and opted to start awarding research grants geared toward finding a solution. They are constantly trying to make better ways to protect the players without restraining them.

The Journal of Sociocultural Examinations of Sports Concussion shows significant data on concussions and . No matter what it is they are always trying to figure out a new helmet or new material to use to make it a lot safer for players if they take a lot of big blows to the head area. The article stated, "suicides of former players linked to head trauma have combined to increase the public's awareness about the potential dangers of concussions in all levels of football."[31]  

Prevention edit

In October 2009, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and the NFL Concussion Committee were called before Congress to defend their policies against allegations of neglect.[32][33] Goodell provided testimony, but was unable to answer many questions. As a result of this incident and pressure from the NFL Players Association, the NFL released a comprehensive overhaul of the league concussion policy in November and December 2009.[34] The policy expanded the list of symptoms that would prevent a player from returning to a game or practice on the same day their injury occurred.[34][35][36]

With continued pressure to protect players, the NFL began preventing players knocked unconscious by a concussion from returning to a game or practice, a policy that applied to Detroit Lions running back Jahvid Best in 2009.[37] Various players have filed lawsuits against the league for the concussions, accusing the league of hiding information that linked head trauma to permanent brain damage, Alzheimer's disease, and dementia.[38][39] Some teams chose not to draft certain players in the NFL Draft due to their past concussion history. According to an Outside the Lines report, the head impact telemetry system (HITS) was in question by the League, although Kevin Guskiewicz, a professor at the University of North Carolina, said the system is functional.[40] The technology could detect and measure the impact of blows to the head in real time during a game, but no such measurement exists in the league at this time.[41] Former Pittsburgh Steelers receiver and current NBC Sports analyst Hines Ward stated the use of the system would be "opening a Pandora's Box", and that the data recorded by the system could be used by team owners to give players lower salaries.[40]

In November 2011, the Cleveland Clinic Center for Spine Health created an online study released by the Journal of Neurosurgery in which various football helmets were compared with each other via crash test dummies. It was also found that leather helmets provided similar results to modern helmets, and in some cases, the leather helmets proved to have superior protection against concussive blows. However, the leather helmets did not provide as much protection against skull fractures.[42][43][44]

Concussion protocol process edit

When a football player sustains a concussion in the NFL, he is required to go through the concussion protocol the league has in place by the NFL Head, Neck and Spine Committee:[45]

Preseason evaluation edit

Before the NFL season starts, all players and coaching staff of an organization are required to be educated on concussions and the importance of promptly reporting any concussion symptoms. All players in the league are also mandated to take a baseline neurological and physical exam. The baseline neurological exam is either a computerized or paper and pencil exam that will test different brain functions. The exam tests attention span, memory, language, speech skills, reasoning, planning, and organizational skills. The results of this test are used as a baseline if a player suffers a head injury at any point throughout the season.[46] The preseason physical examination allows the team physician and athletic trainer the opportunity to review and answer any questions the player might have. This also gives the physician and athletic trainer the time to go over any previous concussions, discuss the importance of reporting any symptoms of a concussion, and explain the concussion protocol that is in place for the current season.[45][47]

In-game identification edit

Current NFL concussion protocol creates positions in each organization's medical staff who are specifically charged with identifying and diagnosing concussions. One of these roles involves an unaffiliated neurotrauma consultant who work with other team physicians and athletic trainers to conduct evaluations. Another position involves athletic trainers who are positioned in the booth at every game to spot potential concussions in players from both teams. These spotters review film throughout the game that could possibly result in concussions and are capable to call "medical timeouts" to relay that information to the medical personnel on the sidelines so that further evaluation can be conducted. These spotters have been in use since the 2011 season.[45][47]

In-game evaluation edit

If a player shows to have a concussion or concussion symptoms, it is mandatory that the individual be removed from the game. If the player is diagnosed with a concussion, they are prohibited from re-entering the game or practice that day. According to the league's protocol, signs of a concussion include: loss of consciousness, lack of balance, holding head after contact, absentmindedness, lethargy, confusion or a visible facial injury in combination with any of the other factors. If the medical staff rule the player clear from a concussion, then the video of that hit must be reviewed before the player can re-enter the game or practice.[45][47]

Post-game edit

After a concussion has occurred, the player must be monitored and examined on a daily basis in a training room by the team medical staff until fully cleared from concussion. Along with the continuous examination prior to a concussion, the player must meet standards that are in place by the league in order to return a game or contact practice. The player may not return to football activities until he has returned to his baseline cognitive function. Next, the player must go through a graduated exercise challenge, followed by a gradual return to practice and play. If player is feeling any setback or post- concussion symptoms, evaluation then starts from the beginning. Finally, the team doctor and an unaffiliated neurotrauma consultant must both clear him for return to play.[47][45]

NFL litigation edit

Denial by the League edit

The NFL spent years trying to deny and cover up any link that emerged connecting head injuries sustained while playing football with long-term brain disorders. The NFL Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (MTBI) Committee, first formed in 1994, reported in December 1999 that the number of head injuries had remained "remarkably the same over the course of four years."[48] The committee went a step further in 2004 when it suggested in an article published in Neurosurgery that "NFL players have evolved to a state where their brains are less susceptible to injury." Two months after that, MTBI publishes another article that concludes "Players who are concussed and return to the same game have fewer initial signs and symptoms than those removed from play. Return to play does not involve a significant risk of a second injury either in the same game or during the season."[48] However, when Dr. Bennet Omalu examined the brain of former Pittsburgh Steeler Mike Webster, he discovered a new brain disease, which he called chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE. He outlined his findings in a scientific paper published in Neurosurgery in July 2005.[48] The NFL's MTBI committee wrote in May 2006 that the article be retracted. Dr. Omalu instead wrote a second paper in the same magazine, this time about former Pittsburgh Steeler Terry Long.[48] Dr. Ira Casson, who was then co-chair of MTBI, denied in a televised interview that there was any link between head injuries sustained playing in the NFL and long-term brain damage. His repeated denials won him the nickname "Dr. No."[48] In September 2009, The New York Times published an article of an NFL-funded study stating that former players are 19 times more likely than the general population to have dementia, Alzheimer's or other memory-related diseases. The NFL's spokesperson, Greg Aiello, publicly said, "the study did not formally diagnose dementia, that it was subject to shortcomings of telephone surveys."[48] Two months later, Aiello told New York Times reporter Alan Schwarz that "it's quite obvious from the medical research that's been done that concussions can lead to long-term problems."[49] It was the first time any League official had acknowledged a link between the two.

Things got worse for the NFL when investigative reporters Steve Fainaru and his brother Mark Fainaru-Wada learned from an anonymous source that the NFL Retirement Board had awarded "disability payments to at least three former players after concluding that football caused their crippling brain injuries – even as the league's top medical experts for years consistently denied any link between the sport and long-term brain damage."[50] One of the cases was that of Mike Webster, who filed a claim in 1999. In 2005, three years after his death, his family received $1.8 million from the Retirement Board. "That same year", write the Fainuru brothers, "the NFL published the 10th installment in its series on concussions research in the medical journal Neurosurgery. The paper, whose authors included three members of the League's [MTBI], asserted that chronic brain injury 'has never been reported in American football players.'"[50]

Since Aiello's admittance, the link between head injuries in football and long-term brain damage have become more accepted in the NFL. In a roundtable discussion with the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce, Jeff Miller, the NFL's senior vice-president for health and safety, admitted that "there is a link between football-related head trauma and chronic traumatic encephalopathy."[51] However, public relations issues continue to plague the League. A report from the Democratic members of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce said that "the NFL rescinded a gift to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for concussion research when it learned the study's findings would be detrimental to the league's image."[52] The NFL had tried to funnel the funds it gave to the NIH towards its own studies. The League rejected the accusations.[53]

To mitigate the public relations (PR) nightmare, the NFL has taken several steps to better assure player safety and bring awareness to head injuries in football players of all ages. Several rule changes took place between 2007 and 2014. NFL commissioner Roger Goodell issued a memo in December 2009 to all 32 teams stating that a player who sustains a concussion cannot return to play if he shows signs or symptoms, such as inability to remember assignments or plays, a gap in memory and persistent dizziness. This move changed the 2007 rule saying a player cannot return only if he has lost consciousness.[54] Additionally, new rules regarding "crown of the helmet" tackles have been installed where a runner or a tackler cannot initiate forcible contact with the crown of the helmet outside the tackle box so as to protect players' heads.[55] Lastly, the NFL and USA Football launched the Heads Up Football initiative, which "emphasizes a smarter and safer way to play and teach youth football, including proper tackling and taking the head out of the game."[56] A mobile application was also launched with help from the CDC where information about concussion protocols and player health and safety can be easily reached by parents and coaches.

The PR issues surrounding the NFL's cover-up of concussions are far from over, and it is too early to tell how and to what extent these events will impact the NFL or football playing. Robert Boland, professor of sports management at New York University and former college football player says, "In the short-run, [the NFL] is still thriving", but downward trends in youth football players shows that future generations "might have less of an intimate attachment to the sport."[57] Boland says this in light of Pop Warner football enrollment dropping by 9.5 percent between 2010 and 2012, likely linked to the high-profile concussion problem.[57]

Federal NFL concussion litigation edit

In April 2011, attorneys Sol H. Weiss and Larry E. Coben from the Philadelphia law firm of Anapol Weiss filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of Ray Easterling, Jim McMahon and five other players. Thousands of former NFL players have since filed lawsuits against the League after suffering repeated concussions throughout their careers.

The multidistrict litigation (MDL) titled In re: National Football League Players' Concussion Injury Litigation (MDL 2323) was filed on January 31, 2012, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Judge Anita B. Brody presides over the matter.[58] The master administrative long-form complaint, filed by Plaintiff's Co-Lead Counsel Sol Weiss and Christopher Seeger on June 7, 2012, alleges the League "... was aware of the evidence and the risks associated with repetitive traumatic brain injuries virtually at the inception, but deliberately ignored and actively concealed the information from the Plaintiffs and all others who participated in organized football at all levels." The master complaint argues the NFL knew or should have known players who sustain repetitive head injuries are at risk of suffering "... early-onset of Alzheimer's Disease, dementia, depression, deficits in cognitive functioning, reduced processing speed, attention, and reasoning, loss of memory, sleeplessness, moods swings, personality changes, and the debilitating and latent disease known as Chronic traumatic encephalopathy ('CTE')."

In April 2012, Easterling was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound in his home.[59] An autopsy report concluded Easterling's brain had evidence of CTE, a degenerative brain disease associated with frequent blows to the head.[60]

One month later, former San Diego Chargers player Junior Seau also died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, and a brain autopsy showed he suffered from CTE.[61]

Like Easterling and Seau, an autopsy of Bears safety Dave Duerson's brain after he committed suicide earlier that year revealed he also suffered from the same degenerative brain disease.[62]

The autopsy results following these players' suicides heightened existing concerns regarding the connection between player deaths and concussions. Neuropathologist Bennet Omalu has identified CTE in the autopsies of former players Mike Webster, Terry Long, Justin Strzelczyk, Andre Waters, and Chris Henry.[63][64] One of the difficult issues facing doctors is attempting to identify mental health effects from concussions during the lives of former players rather than after their deaths.[65] In April 2012, a group of former Dallas Cowboys—including Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees Randy White, Bob Lilly, and Rayfield Wright (among other retired players from around the league)—filed a lawsuit against the NFL, again accusing it of ignoring a link between concussions and brain injury.[66]

In August 2012, the number of players involved in suits against the NFL increased to 3,402, and the League sued three dozen insurance companies in an attempt to force them to cover the costs of defending claims of not protecting players. However, Travelers ultimately sued the League on August 21 in a lawsuit called Discover Property & Casualty Co. et al. vs. National Football League et al., New York State Supreme Court, New York County, No. 652933/2012. The company provided liability coverage for the League's merchandising arm (NFL Properties), and the insurer also pointed out that the above-mentioned lawsuit has allegedly 14 counts against the League, while only two against NFL Properties.[67]

After quarterbacks Jay Cutler, Michael Vick and Alex Smith sustained concussions in Week 10 of the 2012 season, the National Football League Players Association (NFLPA) reiterated their plans to have independent neurologists on the sidelines at every game.[68] The 2013–14 NFL season involved an independent neurological consultant per team on the sideline of every game.[69] Concussion guidelines released by the NFL in 2013, mandated a four-stage protocol for concussions, including examinations, treatment and monitoring prior to a return to play.[70][71][72] In March 2013, the League proposed a rule to reduce concussions by making it illegal for a ball carrier or tackler to "initiate forcible contact by delivering a blow with the top crown of his helmet against an opponent when both players are clearly outside of the tackle box." However, the proposal was met with criticism from players like running backs Matt Forte, Emmitt Smith and Marshall Faulk.[73]

A federal hearing was held on April 9, 2013, in Philadelphia to discuss the League's motion to dismiss the lawsuits brought on behalf of more than 4,500 former players. On July 8, 2013, Judge Brody ordered representatives of both sides of the litigation to explore a possible settlement in the litigation. Judge Brody ordered a report on or before September 3, 2013, regarding the results of the mediation.[74]

A proposed settlement was reached in the litigation on August 29, 2013. Under the agreement, the NFL will contribute $765 million to provide medical help to more than 18,000 former players. Retired players who suffer severe neurological conditions such as Alzheimer's and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) diseases in the future will also be eligible to apply for medical help. In addition, $10 million will fund brain injury research as well as safety and education programs.[75]

The settlement says it should not be interpreted as a statement of legal liability on the part of the NFL.[76]

The settlement, which is projected to protect retired players for nearly 65 years, will compensate injured former players who need immediate help and will provide baseline assessments and medical benefits to those who are symptom-free or beginning to show signs of neurological problems.

"I think it's more important that the players have finality, that they're vindicated, and that as soon as the court approves the settlement they can begin to get screening, and those that are injured can get their compensation. I think that's more important than looking at some documents", attorney Weiss said.[77]

The settlement also allows a player diagnosed with CTE the eligibility to up to 4 million dollars in compensation. This has been met with criticism of the settlement's structure as it only applies to players diagnosed before the settlements preliminary agreement and disallows those diagnosed after the approval of the deal in July.[27]

Controversy continues to surround the NFL response to concussive injuries among current and former players. Although Mike Webster was the first patient to be diagnosed with CTE, posthumously, being the first diagnosed case and one of the higher profile cases illuminating the issue of head trauma injuries to the NFL, his family has not received financial compensation from the NFL. The reason for this is Webster's died before January 1, 2006, and in the terms of the NFL's settlement agreement, the organization is only responsible for dispersing compensation payments to families of players who died from head related trauma and injuries from 2006 and beyond. The Webster family is currently taking legal action against the National Football League with the goal of removing that qualification from the settlement.[78]

The NFL has paid nearly $1 billion in settlements from claims alleging long-term injuries from repeated blows to the head. Courts have examined these claims using a "Trigger" process. This trigger process includes 4 triggers: The "exposure" trigger, the "manifestation" trigger, the "injury-in-fact" trigger, and the "continuous" trigger.[79]

The dementia tests that the NFL-approved process used came under scrutiny in 2021, as black players were assumed to have a lower baseline cognitive function than non-black players, making it more difficult to prove dementia in their case. The practice was called "race-norming" by opponents. A lawsuit attempting to overturn the practice was thrown out in March 2021 and the judge ordered the parties to resolve it via mediation.[80] In June 2021, the NFL announced it would end the practice and would form a panel of neuropsychologists to create new, race-neutral standards.[81]

Kansas City Chiefs concussion lawsuit edit

On December 3, 2013, five former NFL players filed a lawsuit against the Kansas City Chiefs organization: former Chiefs players Alexander Cooper, Leonard Griffin, Christopher Martin, Joe Phillips, and Kevin Porter. They wish to know what the Chiefs knew about concussions and when they knew it.[82]

This lawsuit is unique and different from the thousands of lawsuits previously filed against the NFL. These players are not suing the NFL, and are instead suing the Chiefs.

From 1987 to 1993 there was no Collective Bargaining Agreement established in the NFL. With no existence of a CBA in these years, players who played during this time for the Chiefs can sue the team for many of the same reasons the NFL has been sued. The $765 million settlement in August 2013 between the NFL and former players only protected the NFL. "I think all of our clients were disappointed", McClain said of his clients reaction to the settlement with the NFL.[83] The players gordon suing the Chiefs have all opted-out of the settlement from the previous mediation with the NFL.

A law unique to Missouri allows certain former NFL players to sue the individual team. The current Missouri law states that employees can sue employers in civil court if the employees declined worker's compensation. The Independence attorney for the five ex-Chiefs, Ken McClain said, "The lawsuit is allowed in Missouri after a state workers' compensation statute was amended in 2005 to exclude cases of occupational injury that occur over an extended time."[84]

The amendment of the 2005 law is set to be changed at the end of December 2013. Martin and McClain have both encouraged former players who are eligible to join the lawsuit before their window of opportunity expires.

On December 1, 2012, Jovan Belcher, a then-current member of the Kansas City Chiefs, shot and killed his fiancée, Kassandra Perkins, before committing suicide in the Arrowhead practice facility parking lot. On behalf of Belcher's and Perkins' daughter, lawyers have filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the Chiefs. Belcher's mother has filed a similar suit accusing the Chiefs of ignoring Belcher's cries for help as he complained of concussion like symptoms. The first occurrence came against Jacksonville in 2009 where Belcher was knocked unconscious and failed to receive adequate treatment. The second occurrence was against the Bengals in November 2012. The lawsuits allege, Belcher "suffered what should have been recognized as an acute concussion." However, one lawsuit continues, "despite exhibiting obvious symptoms, Decedent was never removed from play for evaluation and recovery." The lawsuits also claims Belcher exhibited signs of CTE, including changes in his mood and behavior.[85]

On September 30, 2014, it was announced that the brain of former Kansas City Chiefs player, Jovan Belcher, contained neurofibrillary tangles of tau protein; which is associated with CTE. The tangles were distributed throughout Belcher's hippocampus, an area of the brain involved with memory, learning and emotion. If the findings of CTE come to be true, Belcher's daughter and mother are eligible for up to $4 million under the National Football League's current Collective Bargaining Agreement.[85]

Riddell concussion litigation edit

On March 11, 2016, the family of deceased San Diego Charger defensive back Paul Oliver sued helmet-maker Riddell along with its related corporate entities, in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Chicago, Illinois. Shortly thereafter, Pro Football Hall of Fame running back and Super Bowl champion Paul Hornung, represented by The Brad Sohn Law Firm and Corboy & Demetrio, filed a related case against these defendants. Now, some 100 former professional players have sued Riddell in the consolidated litigation in Cook County, which alleges Riddell to have conspired with the NFL in creating false science. Riddell's attempt at the same federal labor preemption defense attempted by the NFL failed. The NFL remains subject to discovery in this case, even though it is a non-party.

Concussions in college football edit

Self-reported concussions among NCAA student athletes[86]
Sport One Multiple None
Women's ice hockey 20.9 8.3 70.8
Men's wrestling 19.5 8.2 72.3
Men's ice hockey 18.6 7.1 74.3
American football 17.9 9.5 72.6
Men's lacrosse 17.8 7.8 74.4

The NCAA, like the NFL, has been criticized for its handling of concussions, with numerous players having retired from football due to concussions, or have filed lawsuits against the association for failing to protect student-athletes from concussions.[87] In 2011, former players Derek Owens and Alex Rucks filed lawsuits against the association for failing to cover the players' safety. Both Owens and Rucks claimed that they had suffered brain trauma which could have been prevented.[88] In 2012, the Southeastern Conference and Big Ten Conference began work on preventing concussions, and appointed University of Mississippi Chancellor Dan Jones to evaluate and review existing research and various diagnoses from past analyses.[89] In 2009, an NCAA panel created and recommended a rule that prevents athletes from returning to a game after sustaining a concussion. The panel also had recommended for an athlete to be sidelined after any concussion-related injury until the athlete was cleared by a doctor.[90] Under the new plan, all student-athletes must sign statements saying that they will report all signs and symptoms of concussions to their coaches. In addition, all athletes must have baseline cognitive testing while the post-injury cognitive testing is strongly recommended. The athletes diagnosed with concussions must be removed from sports for a minimum of one day and can only return when decided by a team physician.

There's been less focus on college players who don't go on to play professional sports, but I think you'll see that getting more attention and go down to people who play it at every level. From time to time we have all had concerns of what we ask student-athletes to do and what the long-term health may be.[91]

— University of Mississippi Chancellor Dan Jones

Concussions in other leagues edit

NCAA Football edit

In the 2003 football season, there were a reported 184 concussions out of the 4251 athletes that participated in that specific football season. That is 6.3% of college football players have reported having a concussion. This number does not include the athletes that fail to report they had a concussion. Out of these athletes that reported their concussion and sat out of competition until released to participate again, 6.5% of these athletes had another concussion occur in the same season. Concussions are known to be one of the most common injuries in College Football, this is because of the constant contact to these athletes' head. Another reason these concussions are very likely to happen is because, once a concussion is sustained, it is very likely to happen again. In fact an athlete that has sustained a concussion has a 35.1% chance of this injury reoccurring. The teams athletic trainers have specific guidelines for when their athletes sustain a concussion, and they must follow these guidelines when diagnosing a concussion, and also releasing a player to play after the initial diagnosis of the concussion. Failure to follow the specific concussion protocol will result in harsh punishment against the university. The athletic trainers do not have a specific guideline to how long it takes for their athletes to recover from these concussions, when they feel their athlete is ready to undergo protocol to return to play, is when they will test if their athlete is healthy enough to participate.

Players that have suffered from the concussion, the average of their age was 19.5 years of age, and they had an estimated 8.4 years of experience. Players that have suffered two or more concussions were slightly younger at 19.1 years of age, and had some more experience at 9.1 years of participation. This supports the statement that athletes with more exposure to these helmet to helmet hits will be more prone to concussions. For example, a quarterback that is hit the least amount on the football fields only suffers concussions around 5.6% of the reported concussions, opposed to offensive linemen that suffer about 20.9% of the reported concussions.

Canadian Football League edit

In the 2010 season for the Canadian Football League, there have been 50 reported concussions; 44.8 percent of players reported having a concussion or concussion-like symptoms, 16.9 percent had confirmed that they had a concussion, and 69.6 percent of all players who suffered from concussions that year suffered from more than one.[92] However, the average of 0.59 concussions per game is lower than the 0.67 recorded by the NFL in 2010.[93] The league eventually started a concussion-awareness program with the help of Football Canada, Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS), the Canadian School Sport Federation, the Canadian Football League Players Association (CFLPA), the Canadian Football League Alumni Association (CFLAA), and the ThinkFirst program.[94] The league eventually pointed out eight protocols:[95]

  • Team physicians and therapists are to use a SCAT2 (a medical protocol), to diagnose concussions and preventing athletes from playing until they have been cleared to play.
  • All players are to be submitted to IMPACT, which is a form of cognitive testing, during training camp.
  • All player concussion assessments in the CFL are to only be used by team physicians and therapists.
  • All coaches and players will receive educational items to aid in recognizing signs of a concussion.
  • Administrators are to report a change from the expectation that a player returns to the game to one that encourages players to be honest about symptoms.
  • The formation of certification programs that teach coaches how to recognize the symptoms of concussions.
  • The formation of training programs for coaches that emphasize that players should never use their helmets to tackle.
  • A new rule in the amateur football rulebook was implemented that requires officials to report suspected concussed players to the coaching or medical staff during games.

In 2012, ThinkFirst founder and Toronto Western Hospital neurosurgeon Charles Tator led a study that was conducted by the University of Toronto, which examined the brains of 20 former players with a history of concussions, and compared them to 20 other players without a history of head injury. A separate group of 20 without football experience served as a control group. Also in 2012, the league and Tator announced a partnership to work in a study that would perform postmortem tests on former CFL players to look for signs of CTE.[96]

Arena Football League edit

In the Arena Football League, despite the league's intense play, very few lawsuits have been filed for concussions. The most notable lawsuit against the league was a lawsuit filed by former Colorado Crush kicker Clay Rush in 2010, who claimed that he suffered from permanent brain damage due to repeated blows to the head during games.[97] Like the NFL, the AFL prohibits players who suffered from concussions from practicing.[98] In 2008, during the original league's final season, the "Shockometer" made its debut at two season-opening games (Dallas Desperados vs. Georgia Force/San Jose SaberCats vs. Chicago Rush) on 40 player helmets. The device is projected to sell for $30 if it is to become available on the market.[99] The players that were given the device play positions that are susceptible to hard hits, such as wide receivers, defensive backs, running backs, and linebackers. AFL Players Association regional director James Guidry stated that the red light does not mean that the player has a concussion, but as a warning for team examiners to inspect the player. Guidry also said that the device could be used to prevent players who do not want to show any signs of weakness after sustaining any concussion-like symptoms from continuing to play.[100]

What happens in a game is much different than what happens in lab situations. To be able to have a partner like the AFL that values this project as much as we do is fantastic. We can learn an awful lot and make this product as good as it can be before it's winding up on the field in widespread use.[99]

— Dave Rossi of Schutt Sports on the Shockometer

Youth football edit

Youth athletes make up 70% of football players in the United States. Every year there are 23,000 nonfatal traumatic brain injuries stemming from playing football that required an emergency visit to the hospital. Of those visits, 90% of them are children between the ages of 5–18 years old.[101]

A study conducted from 2010 to 2014 showed that of the 529 million emergency room visits; 819,000 were contact sport related. This accounted for 0.15% of all emergency visits. This number although small, may affect and cause ramifications in the American healthcare system. These figures are represented with nearly 80-90% of that of the youth population (ages 7–18).[102]

One of the first studies of its kind was performed during the Fall 2011 football season when researchers from Virginia Tech, receiving permission from parents, placed accelerometers (which measure g forces) inside the helmets of seven youth players. These seven players were 7- and 8-year-old boys participating in a community youth league who were chosen because they were expected to have high participation and also because they wore at least a youth medium Riddell Revolution helmet (enabling the accelerometers, battery, and wireless transmitter to fit inside the helmet within the padding). That is, these seven were not a random selecting of players. Rather, the purpose of this study was to establish a baseline of what range of hits are generally expected.[103]

As way of comparison, a collision of 80g is a big hit in a college football game of which there might be only six per game. And the range of 80, 90, or 100g is generally where risk of acute injury and concussion begins to occur (concussion being symptoms such as feeling foggy or woozy and not necessarily loss of consciousness). An example of a lesser force of 40g is heading a soccer ball, and even with blows in this 30 to 40g range, it is not known whether these pose a cumulative risk of injury.[103]

This 2011 study measured a total 753 impacts among these seven players with a median impact of 15g. It did, however, observe 38 impacts of 40g or greater, and six impacts of greater than 80g. Fortunately, none of these youth players experienced a concussion. There is also a concern that since many young players have less developed chest and neck muscles than older players, almost every impact potentially acts likes a surprise hit.[103]

A Virginia Tech doctor stated that reducing the number of higher hits during practice sessions constitutes a real opportunity. Of the 38 impacts of 40g or greater, 29 took place during practice. And of the six impacts greater than 80g, all took place during practice.[103]

One Pop Warner game in particular in 2012 resulted in five concussions.[104] In 2015, a family sued Pop Warner over the suicide of a former player who was later found to have CTE, claiming that the organization knew or should have known about the risk of head injuries.[105] Several other lawsuits have been filed against Pop Warner for related cases.[106][107]

The Center for Disease Control and Preventions (CDC's) has developed the "Heads Up concussion in Youth Sports." It helps youth coaches, players, and parents be more aware of a concussion. Heads up provides important information on preventing, recognizing and responding to a concussion. 63% of youth coaches viewed concussions being more serious, 72% said they are educating others about concussions, and 50% had learned something new.[108]

According to the Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM), kids who begin playing football before the age of twelve are at a greater risk of depression, behavioral regulation, apathy, and executive functioning. Michael Alosco, PhD lead author for the (BUSM) states, "This study adds to growing research suggesting that incurring repeated head impacts through tackle football before the age of 12 can lead to a greater risk for short- and long-term neurological consequences".[109]

Concussions in high school football edit

Concussions are frequent in high school football. Football has the highest rate of concussion among high school sports, with about 11 concussions occurring per 10,000 athletic exposures.[110] About 50 high school or younger football players across the country were killed or sustained serious head injuries on the field since 1997.[111]

Many concussions that occur during high school football often go untreated and are not monitored. This is a big concern because repeated trauma to the head, especially injuries with concussion like symptoms, puts a young athlete's health at serious risk.[112] A 2013 study by Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center found that, despite knowing the risk of serious injury from continuing to play with a concussion, half of high school football players would still play if they had a headache from an injury sustained on the field. Researchers surveyed 120 high school football players. Of those students, 30 reported having suffered a concussion. More than 90 percent recognized the risk of serious injury if they returned to play too quickly, but more than half of those aware of the risks responded they would "always or sometimes continue to play with a headache sustained from an injury", and only 54 percent indicated they would "always or sometimes report symptoms of a concussion to their coach."[113] Another study found that 15.8% of football players who sustain a concussion severe enough to cause loss of consciousness return to play the same day. Due to the fact that only 42% of high schools have access to athletic training services, there has been a large debate regarding the risks that high school football players face.[114]

Eleven high schools in North Central Florida agreed to take a written questionnaire evaluating the varsity football teams' knowledge about concussions. The study was approved by the Institutional Review Board for the Protection of Human Research Subjects by the University of Florida. The review consisted of three sections. First was to identify symptoms of a concussion, second what they believed were possible consequences from not getting the proper treatment of a concussion, and the last section was to indicate if they have ever received information about concussions. 25% of them had never received information about concussion and only 54% had talked about the issue of a concussion with a parent.[115]

Prevention efforts edit

Numerous efforts have attempted to identify potential concussions quickly. Helmet shock data loggers and impact sensors help monitor impacts a player receives. One example is a device created by Schutt Sports during the Arena Football League's 2008 season known as the "Shockometer"—a triangle-shaped object with adhesive on its side that sticks to players' helmets. When a player gets hit by a g-force which exceeds 98, a capsule with a green light in it will change to a red light. Doctors have determined that a g-force of approximately 100 will increase the risk of a concussion, even though a quarterback that gets sacked would normally register a g-force of 150 g. A possible flaw to the Shockometer is that fan activity could accidentally trigger the device.[116] Riddell created the Head Impact Telemetry System (HITS) and Sideline Response System (SRS) to help record the frequency and severity of player impacts during practices and games. Every HITS helmet features MX Encoders, which would automatically record every hit.[117] Eight NFL teams had planned to use the system in the 2010 season, but it was ultimately not used.[40] In 2013, Reebok developed the Head Impact Indicator, which is a quarter-sized device placed on a player's skull, which activates a red/yellow light if the player is hit too hard.[118] Similarly to Reebok's Impact Indicator, Battle Sport Science has released the Impact Indicator 2.0. The Impact Indicator 2.0 looks to increase long-term brain safety for all those who play football.[119] On February 3, 2013, the NFL and General Electric partnered on a five-year, $50 million project to develop technology to predict brain injuries, show injury severity and the rate of recovery, and to create more protective material.[120] There is now another company that has taken on the responsibility of attempting to limit the number of concussions in the game of football. Vicis, a Seattle-based firm, has created a new unique type of helmet that is very flexible due to the many layers that make up this new intricate helmet. This helmet consists of four layers, beginning with the Lode Shell. This layer absorbs the shock from the hit, which then leads to the Core Layer contorting and bending in all directions. This technology alleviates stress from the impact, which consists of all the linear and rotational forces involved in the hit. The Arch Shell exists directly under the Core Layer and is precisely designed to fit a player's head shape. The last layer, the Form Liner, works with the Arch Shell to apportion pressure evenly around the perimeter of the head. Instead of measuring a player's head the conventional way by taking the circumference, Vicis measures the length and width of the head to get more accurate data. A better fit of the helmet allows for the technology to work more advantageously.[121] Several NFL players have tried this new helmet and have provided great feedback. Cliff Avril from the Seattle Seahawks said, "You don't feel the thuds as hard as they normally are." In the NFL's 2017 Helmet Laboratory Testing Performance Results, the Vicis helmet finished first out of the 33 helmets that could have been worn in 2017 NFL season. Concussion-preventing technology continues to improve the safety in the game of football.[122]

NFL edit

Sean Morey, who was named cochair of the NFL Player Association's Concussion and Traumatic Brain Injury Committee in October 2009, told Brown Alumni Magazine in early 2010 that "fifty percent of concussions go unreported." Morey said that players kept their injuries secret because they felt bound by loyalty and feared job loss.[123]

Since then, the National Football League has made numerous rule changes to reduce the number of concussions suffered by players while making the game safer.

In 2010, the NFL reworded the League's rules to prohibit a player from "launching himself off the ground and using his helmet to strike a player in a defenseless posture in the head or neck." Violations of this rule only result in the imposition of a 15-yard unnecessary roughness penalty. In the same season, the NFL mandated that once a player loses his helmet on the playing field, the current play must immediately be whistled dead.[124]

Also in 2010, the NFL mandated that during field goals or extra point attempts, defenders must line up with their entire bodies on the outside of the snapper's body to protect the snapper while he is in a position of vulnerability. Violations of this rule, however, result in only a five-yard penalty for illegal formation.[124]

The Competition Committee reviews all competitive aspects of the game, including playing rules, roster regulations, technology, game-day operations and player protection. The process for modifying or adopting rules and regulations is systematic and consensus-oriented.[125]

To reinforce the seriousness of the rule changes, in the middle of the 2010 season, Commissioner Goodell issued a memo to all NFL teams stating that "more significant discipline, including suspensions, will be imposed on players that strike an opponent in the head or neck area in violation of the rules."[126]

The most drastic step the NFL has taken to reduce head injuries was the 2010 change to the NFL kickoff rules. To reduce what has been referred to as one of the most violent plays in the game, the kickoff was moved up from the 30-yard line to the 35-yard line. The NFL also outlawed the use of the three-man wedge on kickoffs, while allowing the two-man wedge to remain a legal play. Consequently, players on the kicking team must now line up closer to midfield, reducing the amount of space the players have in which to get a running start.[124]

In 2011, the NFL also mandated that certified athletic trainers be available in press boxes during all NFL games. These athletic trainers assist medical personnel located on the sidelines in identifying potential concussions because the symptoms are often difficult to spot and assess from the field level.[124]

On March 20, 2013, the NFL voted to introduce yet another new rule aimed at player safety. Starting in the 2013–2014 season, if a running back lowers the crown of his helmet while he is inside the tackle box or while he is less than three yards downfield and makes contact with a defender, the team will be given a 15-yard penalty.[124]

After three years of declines in reported cases, the 2015 regular season contained a spike in reported concussions even after making several safety improvements the previous year. The total cases reported for the practices, pre-season, and regular season was 271, a 31.6 percent spike. The 2015 cases reported for regular season games was 182, a 58.3 percent spike.[127]

In the 2016 offseason, the NFL implemented a new policy to their concussion protocol. The NFL can now punish teams that do not follow their concussion protocol by imposing a monetary fine or taking away their draft picks. The first violation can be a fine up to $150,000 and the second violation can be a fine no less than $100,000 and a possible removal of draft picks.[128] In 2017, the Seattle Seahawks were under much scrutiny for violating the NFL's concussion protocol by allowing Russell Wilson to return to the game against the Arizona Cardinals without the proper treatment. The Seattle Seahawks failed to have Wilson cleared by a team doctor and an independent physician before allowing him to return to the game.[129] The NFL investigated the incident and imposed a $100,000 fine on the Seahawks.[130][131]

WFA edit

The Women's Football Alliance has come a long way when it comes to the guidelines on making the game safer for its players.

From 2012 to 2017 they have since made it illegal to send a player back into the game with suspicions of a concussion unless cleared by a certified health official.

Youth football edit

Return to play guidelines (RTPs), such as Washington State's Lystedt Law, have been legally mandated since 2009. All 50 states, and Washington, D.C., have now passed legislation to help reduce the number of traumatic brain injuries in youth football.[132]

Senator Dick Durbin, from Illinois, introduced the Protecting Student Athletes from Concussions Act on September 25, 2013, to the U.S. Senate. This act would require athletes, parents, coaches and school officials to be informed of the risks of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and it would also require the "when in doubt, sit it out" policy to be used with athletes that have been suspected of having a concussion and be removed from the field of play. A press release from Senator Durbin stated that many major U.S. sports organizations, including the NFL and NHL, endorsed the bill.[133]

In 2016, the Pop Warner league banned kickoffs in an attempt to reduce high-speed collisions that result in concussions.[134]

Screening procedure edit

[dubious ]

In September 2015, researchers with the Department of Veterans Affairs and Boston University announced that they had identified CTE in 96 percent of NFL players that they had examined and in 79 percent of all football players.[135]

As of February 2015, Gary Small and colleagues have been called into question by the FDA for their overzealous commercialization and promotion of clinically unproven screening that fellow peer researchers deem fit only for research and they have responded by withdrawing related materials from their website.[136][137]

To date, all screening procedures that examine football players for brain damage have been post mortem. In 2013, Gary Small and colleagues developed an in vivo chemical tracer that can detect tau protein build up in living players. Small and his team invented this new chemical tracer, 2-(1-{6-[(2-[F-18]fluoroethyl)(methyl)amino]-2-naphthyl}ethylidene)malononitrile, or FDDNP, that could be used in Positron Emission Tomography (PET) scans.[138] This new tracer measures for tau protein and amyloid plaque accumulation in human brains; symptoms of repetitive brain trauma among other things. Although tracers have been developed to screen for the build-up of tau proteins in the human brain, FDDNP is the first PET tracer that can be used in vivo in human trials. FDDNP was originally developed in an effort to detect Alzheimer's in elderly individuals, thus the article was published in the journal of the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry. However, because there are similarities between Alzheimer's and the effects of Chronic Traumatic Encephelopathy (CTE), FDDNP was used to study the extent of brain trauma in consenting, retired NFL players.

Small and colleagues performed a controlled experiment on retired NFL players and an equal number of control participants. Unfortunately the sample size was very small as only 5 players of the 19 contacted were eligible for the study. Though the sample size was small, a good range of positions were represented (linebacker, quarterback, offensive lineman, defensive lineman, and a center) and all players had played in the league at least 10 years. The players had to be at least 45 years of age and currently exhibit symptoms of cognitive and mood disruption. Control participants had to meet certain criteria as well to ensure that they were as similar as possible to the NFL players in order to eliminate any biases or confounding variables. Age, Body Mass Index (BMI), years of education, and family history of dementia were all selected as the selection criteria for control participants. All participants received intravenous injections of the FDDNP tracer and were tested over 4 weeks using PET imaging technology.

The injection of the FDDNP tracer was successful, and the results of the study showed significant differences between the NFL players and control participants. The NFL players had significantly higher FDDNP signals than control participants, indicating a greater amount of tau protein accumulation. The cortical regions of all the participants studied showed no significant difference, but the NFL players had FDDNP levels that were significantly higher in the caudate, putamen, thalamus, sub thalamus, midbrain, and cerebellar white matter regions of the brain as compared to the control participants.[138] In addition, a positive correlation was found between the number of head injuries the players sustained and the levels of FDDNP binding. This suggests that players with a more severe history of head trauma will likely have significantly more accumulation of tau protein. This, in turn, gives rise to the suggestion that a more severe history of head trauma will result in greater deterioration of the brain, cognitive functioning, and mood regulation.

The findings of the study were consistent with previous autopsy studies of individuals with CTE. The important distinction to make, however, is that the patients in Small's study were not on the slab and walked out after testing was completed. This is monumental in the field of brain trauma and concussion research.

Based on recent new blood tests; evidence is revealing no change in blood plasma tau and serum neurofilament light concentrations following sport related concussions. However these levels did rise in more severe concussion sport related injuries. This can potentially suggest that a new blood test be developed and help aid in identifying the severity of concussion, and assist in concussion protocols.[139]

Recovery efforts edit

Concussions are proven to cause loss of brain function. This can lead to physical and emotional symptoms such as attention disorders, depression, headaches, nausea, and amnesia. These symptoms can last for days or weeks and even after the symptoms have gone, the brain still will not be completely normal. Players with multiple concussions can have drastically worsened symptoms and exponentially increased recovery time.

Researchers at UCLA used a brain-imaging tool to identify a certain protein found in five retired NFL players. The presence and accumulation of tau proteins found in the five living players, are associated with Alzheimer's disease. Previously, this type of exam could only be performed with an autopsy. Scientists at UCLA created a chemical marker that binds to the abnormal proteins and they are able to view this with positron emission tomography (PET) scan. Researcher at UCLA, Gary Small explains, "Providing a non-invasive method for early detection is a critical first step in developing interventions to prevent symptom onset and progression in CTE".[140]

Post-concussive symptoms (PCS) is an area of recovery that is often not discussed. New evidence suggest that new recovery protocols have been recommended and designed to more adequately and efficiently recover from concussions. PCS is a concussion symptom lasting longer than 14 days. Current protocols suggest that the athlete refrain from any physical activity until symptoms free. However, according to the Journal of Athletic Training "a physiological approach to prolonged recovery from sport-related concussion" suggests some aerobic activity may be beneficial to more appropriate healing from concussion, and may lessen the reoccurrence of repeated concussions.[141]

There has been promising evidence that blood flow restriction based exercises can be used to improve Post-Concussion Syndrome (PCS). "The leading theory supporting this is that human growth hormone is released in response to increased lactate production from exercise, enhancing the brain function and recovery". This exercise based program could potentially be used in conjunction with aerobic therapy to better improve concussion symptoms during the recovery process.[142]

As of 2011, all 32 NFL teams are required to have at least one Physical Therapist on staff. Physical Therapist can help with current and former NFL players that have experienced a concussion. A Vestibular Physical Therapist can create customized treatment for dizziness and balance dysfunction associated with a concussion.[143]

See also edit

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External links edit

  • "Concussion Info" (PDF).
  • "Heads Up, Youth Sports". 5 March 2019.
  • "Concussions Cause Long-Term Effects Lasting Decades". Medical News Today. 9 June 2015.
  • Culverhouse, Gay (2012). Throwaway Players. Behler Publications. p. 152. ISBN 978-1933016702.
  • "'Health of the Game' Part 2: Helmet research turning heads at Va. Tech". nflevolution.com. 2012-11-14.
  • Cook, Kevin (2012-09-11). "Dying to Play". The New York Times. Retrieved 4 December 2012.
  • Fainaru-Wada, Mark; Fainaru, Steve (2014). League of Denial : The NFL, Concussions, and the Battle for Truth. Three Rivers Press. ISBN 978-0770437565.
  • "League of Denial: The NFL's Concussion Crisis", PBS Frontline, Season 2013: Episode 2.
  • Powers, Martine, "The broken promises of the NFL's concussion settlement, Washington Post, February 6, 2024. (podcast, 22 min.)

concussions, american, football, concussions, play, related, head, blows, american, football, have, been, shown, cause, chronic, traumatic, encephalopathy, which, player, deaths, other, debilitating, symptoms, after, retirement, including, memory, loss, depres. Concussions and play related head blows in American football have been shown to be the cause of chronic traumatic encephalopathy CTE which has led to player deaths and other debilitating symptoms after retirement including memory loss depression anxiety headaches stress and sleep disturbances 1 The list of ex NFL players that have either been diagnosed post mortem with CTE or have reported symptoms of CTE continues to grow 2 3 According to Boston University CTE is a brain degenerative disease found in athletes military veterans and others with history of repetitive brain trauma Although CTE is highly controversial and misunderstood it is believed that a protein called Tau forms clumps that slowly spread throughout the brain killing brain cells There is also theoretical research that suggests early CTE might result from damaged blood vessels within the brain That could trigger brain inflammation and eventually the development of proteins such as Tau believed to play a key role in CTE This hypothesis was tested on adult mice the researchers state that their brains possess similar attributes to that of human brains Using a special device the mice were given precise impacts that would lead to mild brain traumas similar to what an athlete would suffer in contact sports The mice whose brains were scanned using a specialized MRI immediately showed changes to the electrical functions of their brains 4 According to 2017 study on brains of deceased gridiron football players 99 of tested brains of NFL players 88 of CFL players 64 of semi professional players 91 of college football players and 21 of high school football players had various stages of CTE 5 Other common injuries include injuries of legs arms neck and lower back 6 7 8 9 Contents 1 NFL concussions 2 History 3 Research 4 Effects of concussions 5 Helmets 6 Prevention 7 Concussion protocol process 7 1 Preseason evaluation 7 2 In game identification 7 3 In game evaluation 7 4 Post game 8 NFL litigation 8 1 Denial by the League 8 2 Federal NFL concussion litigation 8 3 Kansas City Chiefs concussion lawsuit 8 4 Riddell concussion litigation 9 Concussions in college football 10 Concussions in other leagues 10 1 NCAA Football 10 2 Canadian Football League 10 3 Arena Football League 10 4 Youth football 10 5 Concussions in high school football 11 Prevention efforts 11 1 NFL 11 2 WFA 11 3 Youth football 12 Screening procedure 13 Recovery efforts 14 See also 15 References 16 External linksNFL concussions editThis section is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Efforts are being made within the NFL to address concussions and promote player safety The league has made progress in recent years in reducing concussive injuries The NFL is committed to addressing these issues and making improvements wherever possible by actively working to reduce the risk of head injuries and make the game safer for players 10 There has been a persisting concern regarding concussions in the NFL particularly as former players come forward with experiences related to these injuries Research has indicated that repeated head trauma can have a significant impact on behavior and cognitive function 11 The number of reported concussions in the National Football League NFL has increased by 18 since 2022 12 Some experts believe this trend should be reversed citing technological advancements and helmet studies It has been suggested that the NFL modify its helmets to reduce concussions 13 If a player displays or reports symptoms of a concussion or stinger a nerve pinch injury after a blow to the head they must follow NFL protocol Various individuals including the team athletic trainer booth ATC spotter team physician game official coach teammate sideline Unaffiliated Neurotrauma Consultant UNC or booth UNC can initiate the protocol 14 History edit nbsp 1908 cartoon by W C Morris highlighting the dangers that were associated with the sport Concussions are frequent injuries among football players Concussions occur when the head is subject to a large impact force resulting in a minor brain injury There has been a growing concern about concussions since the early 1900s In 1906 a Harvard student athlete died from a head injury and the team doctors released a report titled The Physical Aspect of American Football in the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal describing the type severity and number of injuries the team sustained in the 1905 season 15 The NFL first began to review the subject formally in 1994 then NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue approved the creation of the Mild Traumatic Brain Injury MTBI Committee with the stated goal of studying the effects of concussions and sub concussive injury in NFL players Tagliabue appointed rheumatologist Elliot Pellman to chair the committee 16 Pellman s appointment was met with harsh criticism because he is not a neurologist or neuropsychologist and often admitted ignorance about head injuries 16 The concussion data collected by the league from 1996 to 2001 has been shown to understate the actual number of diagnosed concussions by ten percent The league additionally relied on legal counsel who were actively involved in downplaying health risks in the tobacco industry 17 The same year the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health NIOSH reported a statistically significant increase in the risk of neurological disorders such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ALS in retired football players which furthered public knowledge about the risk of long term neurocognitive disease related to repeated head impacts 18 Despite the NIOSH study Pellman and the MTBI Committee drew their own conclusions that continued to contradict these findings and those of other organizations Biomechanical engineers and neurosurgeons informed the Committee that the helmet safety standard at that time was insufficient to minimize the risk of concussions 19 The MTBI Committee began studying the nature of tackle plays resulting in concussive impacts and developing its own biomechanical analysis of the effect of these forces on the brain 20 It started publishing study results in 2003 that stated there were no long term negative health consequences associated with concussions sustained by NFL players A six year study by the Committee concluded that Players who are concussed and return to the same game have fewer initial signs and symptoms than those removed from play Return to play does not involve a significant risk of a second injury either in the same game or during the season 21 Research editOther organizations continued to publish study results that linked repeated concussions and long term health problems contrary to reports by the MTBI Committee A 2003 report by the Center for the Study of Retired Athletes at the University of North Carolina for example found a connection between numerous concussions and depression among former professional football players Further the center s follow up study in 2005 associated both brain impairment and Alzheimer s disease with retired NFL players who had histories of concussions 22 A 2004 doctoral dissertation by Don Brady examined NFL Players knowledge of concussions studying both active and retired National Football League Players knowledge of concussions Brady s findings concluded that many NFL players lacked accurate and essential knowledge pertaining to various aspects of a concussion that the preponderance of credible experimental and clinical evidence pertaining to the adverse effects of concussion indicates that the brain is injured as a result of a concussion that the altered cell functioning and cell death along with subtle to more visible neurological neurocognitive psychological and other medical problems reflect a diverse range of lifelong negative consequences of a concussion brain injury and that sports team health care personnel need to focus primarily on the athletes health and well being and not minimize an injury or primarily concentrate on the players capacity to perform on the field This expanded focus of health care is necessary in order to avoid any real or perceived conflicts of interest emerging in the concussion research concussion management and related return to play decision making process 23 During November 2014 Brady filed objections to the proposed NFL concussion settlement offer Brady sent a cover letter and detailed objections on behalf of NFL retired players to the presiding US district court judge Anita Brody 24 In addition to the studies that continued to contradict the work of the MTBI Committee renowned experts and sports journalists wrote critical reviews of the committee s studies Robert Cantu of the American College of Sports Medicine noted bias in the committee s extremely small sample size and held that no conclusions should be drawn from the NFL s studies In an ESPN Magazine article titled Doctor Yes Peter Keating criticized Pellman and the MTBI Committee s work and argued that the Committee has drawn a number of important conclusions about head trauma and how to treat it that contradict the research and experiences of many other doctors who treat sports concussions not to mention the players who have suffered them 16 More studies continued to associate repetitive head injuries with neurological problems later in life Kevin Guskiewicz Director of the Center for the Study of Retired Athletes in the Department of Exercise and Sport Science at the University of North Carolina analyzed data from a 2007 study of nearly 2 500 former NFL players He found about 11 percent of the study participants suffered from clinical depression with a threefold increased risk in former players who had a history of three or four concussions 25 The following year the NFL commissioned the University of Michigan Institute for Social Research to conduct a study involving more than 1 000 former NFL players The results reported that Alzheimer s disease or similar diseases appear to have been diagnosed in former NFL players vastly more often than in the general population at a rate of 19 times the normal rate for men ages 30 through 49 The NFL responded to these results by claiming the study was incomplete 26 On September 30 2014 researchers with Boston University announced that in autopsies of 79 brains of former NFL players 76 had tested positive for CTE 27 As of January 2017 that number had grown to 90 out of 94 28 A study published in The Journal of the American Medical Association in July 2017 showed that 110 of 111 former NFL players whose brains were examined were found to have suffered from CTE 29 Effects of concussions editThis section is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Concussions are a large issue in the NFL Many findings suggest that the onset of dementia related symptoms are initiated by repetitive cerebral concussions in professional football players CTE and other issues have been a very serious issue being caused by severe brain damage in football ESPN states that The brain of former Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Jovan Belcher the 25 year old player who shot and killed his girlfriend in 2012 before committing suicide showed signs of pervasive brain damage like that found in other deceased NFL players according to a neuropathologist Helmets editIn the article Sports Law and Governance it talks about how over 2 000 former NFL players are dealing with concussions later on in life The players are complaining and the league is getting sued for how the helmets have led players to have severe lifelong brain damage The NFL has been responding with a new HIT system helping players not get these problems so easily 30 Wildman a sports scientist shows how much of an ongoing criticism is about NFL helmets and just helmets in general The NFL finally acknowledged the negative impact concussions have on its billion dollar business and opted to start awarding research grants geared toward finding a solution They are constantly trying to make better ways to protect the players without restraining them The Journal of Sociocultural Examinations of Sports Concussion shows significant data on concussions and No matter what it is they are always trying to figure out a new helmet or new material to use to make it a lot safer for players if they take a lot of big blows to the head area The article stated suicides of former players linked to head trauma have combined to increase the public s awareness about the potential dangers of concussions in all levels of football 31 Prevention editIn October 2009 NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and the NFL Concussion Committee were called before Congress to defend their policies against allegations of neglect 32 33 Goodell provided testimony but was unable to answer many questions As a result of this incident and pressure from the NFL Players Association the NFL released a comprehensive overhaul of the league concussion policy in November and December 2009 34 The policy expanded the list of symptoms that would prevent a player from returning to a game or practice on the same day their injury occurred 34 35 36 With continued pressure to protect players the NFL began preventing players knocked unconscious by a concussion from returning to a game or practice a policy that applied to Detroit Lions running back Jahvid Best in 2009 37 Various players have filed lawsuits against the league for the concussions accusing the league of hiding information that linked head trauma to permanent brain damage Alzheimer s disease and dementia 38 39 Some teams chose not to draft certain players in the NFL Draft due to their past concussion history According to an Outside the Lines report the head impact telemetry system HITS was in question by the League although Kevin Guskiewicz a professor at the University of North Carolina said the system is functional 40 The technology could detect and measure the impact of blows to the head in real time during a game but no such measurement exists in the league at this time 41 Former Pittsburgh Steelers receiver and current NBC Sports analyst Hines Ward stated the use of the system would be opening a Pandora s Box and that the data recorded by the system could be used by team owners to give players lower salaries 40 In November 2011 the Cleveland Clinic Center for Spine Health created an online study released by the Journal of Neurosurgery in which various football helmets were compared with each other via crash test dummies It was also found that leather helmets provided similar results to modern helmets and in some cases the leather helmets proved to have superior protection against concussive blows However the leather helmets did not provide as much protection against skull fractures 42 43 44 Concussion protocol process editWhen a football player sustains a concussion in the NFL he is required to go through the concussion protocol the league has in place by the NFL Head Neck and Spine Committee 45 Preseason evaluation edit Before the NFL season starts all players and coaching staff of an organization are required to be educated on concussions and the importance of promptly reporting any concussion symptoms All players in the league are also mandated to take a baseline neurological and physical exam The baseline neurological exam is either a computerized or paper and pencil exam that will test different brain functions The exam tests attention span memory language speech skills reasoning planning and organizational skills The results of this test are used as a baseline if a player suffers a head injury at any point throughout the season 46 The preseason physical examination allows the team physician and athletic trainer the opportunity to review and answer any questions the player might have This also gives the physician and athletic trainer the time to go over any previous concussions discuss the importance of reporting any symptoms of a concussion and explain the concussion protocol that is in place for the current season 45 47 In game identification edit Current NFL concussion protocol creates positions in each organization s medical staff who are specifically charged with identifying and diagnosing concussions One of these roles involves an unaffiliated neurotrauma consultant who work with other team physicians and athletic trainers to conduct evaluations Another position involves athletic trainers who are positioned in the booth at every game to spot potential concussions in players from both teams These spotters review film throughout the game that could possibly result in concussions and are capable to call medical timeouts to relay that information to the medical personnel on the sidelines so that further evaluation can be conducted These spotters have been in use since the 2011 season 45 47 In game evaluation edit If a player shows to have a concussion or concussion symptoms it is mandatory that the individual be removed from the game If the player is diagnosed with a concussion they are prohibited from re entering the game or practice that day According to the league s protocol signs of a concussion include loss of consciousness lack of balance holding head after contact absentmindedness lethargy confusion or a visible facial injury in combination with any of the other factors If the medical staff rule the player clear from a concussion then the video of that hit must be reviewed before the player can re enter the game or practice 45 47 Post game edit After a concussion has occurred the player must be monitored and examined on a daily basis in a training room by the team medical staff until fully cleared from concussion Along with the continuous examination prior to a concussion the player must meet standards that are in place by the league in order to return a game or contact practice The player may not return to football activities until he has returned to his baseline cognitive function Next the player must go through a graduated exercise challenge followed by a gradual return to practice and play If player is feeling any setback or post concussion symptoms evaluation then starts from the beginning Finally the team doctor and an unaffiliated neurotrauma consultant must both clear him for return to play 47 45 NFL litigation editDenial by the League edit The NFL spent years trying to deny and cover up any link that emerged connecting head injuries sustained while playing football with long term brain disorders The NFL Mild Traumatic Brain Injury MTBI Committee first formed in 1994 reported in December 1999 that the number of head injuries had remained remarkably the same over the course of four years 48 The committee went a step further in 2004 when it suggested in an article published in Neurosurgery that NFL players have evolved to a state where their brains are less susceptible to injury Two months after that MTBI publishes another article that concludes Players who are concussed and return to the same game have fewer initial signs and symptoms than those removed from play Return to play does not involve a significant risk of a second injury either in the same game or during the season 48 However when Dr Bennet Omalu examined the brain of former Pittsburgh Steeler Mike Webster he discovered a new brain disease which he called chronic traumatic encephalopathy or CTE He outlined his findings in a scientific paper published in Neurosurgery in July 2005 48 The NFL s MTBI committee wrote in May 2006 that the article be retracted Dr Omalu instead wrote a second paper in the same magazine this time about former Pittsburgh Steeler Terry Long 48 Dr Ira Casson who was then co chair of MTBI denied in a televised interview that there was any link between head injuries sustained playing in the NFL and long term brain damage His repeated denials won him the nickname Dr No 48 In September 2009 The New York Times published an article of an NFL funded study stating that former players are 19 times more likely than the general population to have dementia Alzheimer s or other memory related diseases The NFL s spokesperson Greg Aiello publicly said the study did not formally diagnose dementia that it was subject to shortcomings of telephone surveys 48 Two months later Aiello told New York Times reporter Alan Schwarz that it s quite obvious from the medical research that s been done that concussions can lead to long term problems 49 It was the first time any League official had acknowledged a link between the two Things got worse for the NFL when investigative reporters Steve Fainaru and his brother Mark Fainaru Wada learned from an anonymous source that the NFL Retirement Board had awarded disability payments to at least three former players after concluding that football caused their crippling brain injuries even as the league s top medical experts for years consistently denied any link between the sport and long term brain damage 50 One of the cases was that of Mike Webster who filed a claim in 1999 In 2005 three years after his death his family received 1 8 million from the Retirement Board That same year write the Fainuru brothers the NFL published the 10th installment in its series on concussions research in the medical journal Neurosurgery The paper whose authors included three members of the League s MTBI asserted that chronic brain injury has never been reported in American football players 50 Since Aiello s admittance the link between head injuries in football and long term brain damage have become more accepted in the NFL In a roundtable discussion with the U S House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce Jeff Miller the NFL s senior vice president for health and safety admitted that there is a link between football related head trauma and chronic traumatic encephalopathy 51 However public relations issues continue to plague the League A report from the Democratic members of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce said that the NFL rescinded a gift to the National Institutes of Health NIH for concussion research when it learned the study s findings would be detrimental to the league s image 52 The NFL had tried to funnel the funds it gave to the NIH towards its own studies The League rejected the accusations 53 To mitigate the public relations PR nightmare the NFL has taken several steps to better assure player safety and bring awareness to head injuries in football players of all ages Several rule changes took place between 2007 and 2014 NFL commissioner Roger Goodell issued a memo in December 2009 to all 32 teams stating that a player who sustains a concussion cannot return to play if he shows signs or symptoms such as inability to remember assignments or plays a gap in memory and persistent dizziness This move changed the 2007 rule saying a player cannot return only if he has lost consciousness 54 Additionally new rules regarding crown of the helmet tackles have been installed where a runner or a tackler cannot initiate forcible contact with the crown of the helmet outside the tackle box so as to protect players heads 55 Lastly the NFL and USA Football launched the Heads Up Football initiative which emphasizes a smarter and safer way to play and teach youth football including proper tackling and taking the head out of the game 56 A mobile application was also launched with help from the CDC where information about concussion protocols and player health and safety can be easily reached by parents and coaches The PR issues surrounding the NFL s cover up of concussions are far from over and it is too early to tell how and to what extent these events will impact the NFL or football playing Robert Boland professor of sports management at New York University and former college football player says In the short run the NFL is still thriving but downward trends in youth football players shows that future generations might have less of an intimate attachment to the sport 57 Boland says this in light of Pop Warner football enrollment dropping by 9 5 percent between 2010 and 2012 likely linked to the high profile concussion problem 57 Federal NFL concussion litigation edit In April 2011 attorneys Sol H Weiss and Larry E Coben from the Philadelphia law firm of Anapol Weiss filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of Ray Easterling Jim McMahon and five other players Thousands of former NFL players have since filed lawsuits against the League after suffering repeated concussions throughout their careers The multidistrict litigation MDL titled In re National Football League Players Concussion Injury Litigation MDL 2323 was filed on January 31 2012 in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania Judge Anita B Brody presides over the matter 58 The master administrative long form complaint filed by Plaintiff s Co Lead Counsel Sol Weiss and Christopher Seeger on June 7 2012 alleges the League was aware of the evidence and the risks associated with repetitive traumatic brain injuries virtually at the inception but deliberately ignored and actively concealed the information from the Plaintiffs and all others who participated in organized football at all levels The master complaint argues the NFL knew or should have known players who sustain repetitive head injuries are at risk of suffering early onset of Alzheimer s Disease dementia depression deficits in cognitive functioning reduced processing speed attention and reasoning loss of memory sleeplessness moods swings personality changes and the debilitating and latent disease known as Chronic traumatic encephalopathy CTE In April 2012 Easterling was found dead from a self inflicted gunshot wound in his home 59 An autopsy report concluded Easterling s brain had evidence of CTE a degenerative brain disease associated with frequent blows to the head 60 One month later former San Diego Chargers player Junior Seau also died of a self inflicted gunshot wound and a brain autopsy showed he suffered from CTE 61 Like Easterling and Seau an autopsy of Bears safety Dave Duerson s brain after he committed suicide earlier that year revealed he also suffered from the same degenerative brain disease 62 The autopsy results following these players suicides heightened existing concerns regarding the connection between player deaths and concussions Neuropathologist Bennet Omalu has identified CTE in the autopsies of former players Mike Webster Terry Long Justin Strzelczyk Andre Waters and Chris Henry 63 64 One of the difficult issues facing doctors is attempting to identify mental health effects from concussions during the lives of former players rather than after their deaths 65 In April 2012 a group of former Dallas Cowboys including Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees Randy White Bob Lilly and Rayfield Wright among other retired players from around the league filed a lawsuit against the NFL again accusing it of ignoring a link between concussions and brain injury 66 In August 2012 the number of players involved in suits against the NFL increased to 3 402 and the League sued three dozen insurance companies in an attempt to force them to cover the costs of defending claims of not protecting players However Travelers ultimately sued the League on August 21 in a lawsuit called Discover Property amp Casualty Co et al vs National Football League et al New York State Supreme Court New York County No 652933 2012 The company provided liability coverage for the League s merchandising arm NFL Properties and the insurer also pointed out that the above mentioned lawsuit has allegedly 14 counts against the League while only two against NFL Properties 67 After quarterbacks Jay Cutler Michael Vick and Alex Smith sustained concussions in Week 10 of the 2012 season the National Football League Players Association NFLPA reiterated their plans to have independent neurologists on the sidelines at every game 68 The 2013 14 NFL season involved an independent neurological consultant per team on the sideline of every game 69 Concussion guidelines released by the NFL in 2013 mandated a four stage protocol for concussions including examinations treatment and monitoring prior to a return to play 70 71 72 In March 2013 the League proposed a rule to reduce concussions by making it illegal for a ball carrier or tackler to initiate forcible contact by delivering a blow with the top crown of his helmet against an opponent when both players are clearly outside of the tackle box However the proposal was met with criticism from players like running backs Matt Forte Emmitt Smith and Marshall Faulk 73 A federal hearing was held on April 9 2013 in Philadelphia to discuss the League s motion to dismiss the lawsuits brought on behalf of more than 4 500 former players On July 8 2013 Judge Brody ordered representatives of both sides of the litigation to explore a possible settlement in the litigation Judge Brody ordered a report on or before September 3 2013 regarding the results of the mediation 74 A proposed settlement was reached in the litigation on August 29 2013 Under the agreement the NFL will contribute 765 million to provide medical help to more than 18 000 former players Retired players who suffer severe neurological conditions such as Alzheimer s and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ALS diseases in the future will also be eligible to apply for medical help In addition 10 million will fund brain injury research as well as safety and education programs 75 The settlement says it should not be interpreted as a statement of legal liability on the part of the NFL 76 The settlement which is projected to protect retired players for nearly 65 years will compensate injured former players who need immediate help and will provide baseline assessments and medical benefits to those who are symptom free or beginning to show signs of neurological problems I think it s more important that the players have finality that they re vindicated and that as soon as the court approves the settlement they can begin to get screening and those that are injured can get their compensation I think that s more important than looking at some documents attorney Weiss said 77 The settlement also allows a player diagnosed with CTE the eligibility to up to 4 million dollars in compensation This has been met with criticism of the settlement s structure as it only applies to players diagnosed before the settlements preliminary agreement and disallows those diagnosed after the approval of the deal in July 27 Controversy continues to surround the NFL response to concussive injuries among current and former players Although Mike Webster was the first patient to be diagnosed with CTE posthumously being the first diagnosed case and one of the higher profile cases illuminating the issue of head trauma injuries to the NFL his family has not received financial compensation from the NFL The reason for this is Webster s died before January 1 2006 and in the terms of the NFL s settlement agreement the organization is only responsible for dispersing compensation payments to families of players who died from head related trauma and injuries from 2006 and beyond The Webster family is currently taking legal action against the National Football League with the goal of removing that qualification from the settlement 78 The NFL has paid nearly 1 billion in settlements from claims alleging long term injuries from repeated blows to the head Courts have examined these claims using a Trigger process This trigger process includes 4 triggers The exposure trigger the manifestation trigger the injury in fact trigger and the continuous trigger 79 The dementia tests that the NFL approved process used came under scrutiny in 2021 as black players were assumed to have a lower baseline cognitive function than non black players making it more difficult to prove dementia in their case The practice was called race norming by opponents A lawsuit attempting to overturn the practice was thrown out in March 2021 and the judge ordered the parties to resolve it via mediation 80 In June 2021 the NFL announced it would end the practice and would form a panel of neuropsychologists to create new race neutral standards 81 Kansas City Chiefs concussion lawsuit edit On December 3 2013 five former NFL players filed a lawsuit against the Kansas City Chiefs organization former Chiefs players Alexander Cooper Leonard Griffin Christopher Martin Joe Phillips and Kevin Porter They wish to know what the Chiefs knew about concussions and when they knew it 82 This lawsuit is unique and different from the thousands of lawsuits previously filed against the NFL These players are not suing the NFL and are instead suing the Chiefs From 1987 to 1993 there was no Collective Bargaining Agreement established in the NFL With no existence of a CBA in these years players who played during this time for the Chiefs can sue the team for many of the same reasons the NFL has been sued The 765 million settlement in August 2013 between the NFL and former players only protected the NFL I think all of our clients were disappointed McClain said of his clients reaction to the settlement with the NFL 83 The players gordon suing the Chiefs have all opted out of the settlement from the previous mediation with the NFL A law unique to Missouri allows certain former NFL players to sue the individual team The current Missouri law states that employees can sue employers in civil court if the employees declined worker s compensation The Independence attorney for the five ex Chiefs Ken McClain said The lawsuit is allowed in Missouri after a state workers compensation statute was amended in 2005 to exclude cases of occupational injury that occur over an extended time 84 The amendment of the 2005 law is set to be changed at the end of December 2013 Martin and McClain have both encouraged former players who are eligible to join the lawsuit before their window of opportunity expires On December 1 2012 Jovan Belcher a then current member of the Kansas City Chiefs shot and killed his fiancee Kassandra Perkins before committing suicide in the Arrowhead practice facility parking lot On behalf of Belcher s and Perkins daughter lawyers have filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the Chiefs Belcher s mother has filed a similar suit accusing the Chiefs of ignoring Belcher s cries for help as he complained of concussion like symptoms The first occurrence came against Jacksonville in 2009 where Belcher was knocked unconscious and failed to receive adequate treatment The second occurrence was against the Bengals in November 2012 The lawsuits allege Belcher suffered what should have been recognized as an acute concussion However one lawsuit continues despite exhibiting obvious symptoms Decedent was never removed from play for evaluation and recovery The lawsuits also claims Belcher exhibited signs of CTE including changes in his mood and behavior 85 On September 30 2014 it was announced that the brain of former Kansas City Chiefs player Jovan Belcher contained neurofibrillary tangles of tau protein which is associated with CTE The tangles were distributed throughout Belcher s hippocampus an area of the brain involved with memory learning and emotion If the findings of CTE come to be true Belcher s daughter and mother are eligible for up to 4 million under the National Football League s current Collective Bargaining Agreement 85 Riddell concussion litigation edit On March 11 2016 the family of deceased San Diego Charger defensive back Paul Oliver sued helmet maker Riddell along with its related corporate entities in the Circuit Court of Cook County Chicago Illinois Shortly thereafter Pro Football Hall of Fame running back and Super Bowl champion Paul Hornung represented by The Brad Sohn Law Firm and Corboy amp Demetrio filed a related case against these defendants Now some 100 former professional players have sued Riddell in the consolidated litigation in Cook County which alleges Riddell to have conspired with the NFL in creating false science Riddell s attempt at the same federal labor preemption defense attempted by the NFL failed The NFL remains subject to discovery in this case even though it is a non party Concussions in college football editSelf reported concussions among NCAA student athletes 86 Sport One Multiple None Women s ice hockey 20 9 8 3 70 8 Men s wrestling 19 5 8 2 72 3 Men s ice hockey 18 6 7 1 74 3 American football 17 9 9 5 72 6 Men s lacrosse 17 8 7 8 74 4 The NCAA like the NFL has been criticized for its handling of concussions with numerous players having retired from football due to concussions or have filed lawsuits against the association for failing to protect student athletes from concussions 87 In 2011 former players Derek Owens and Alex Rucks filed lawsuits against the association for failing to cover the players safety Both Owens and Rucks claimed that they had suffered brain trauma which could have been prevented 88 In 2012 the Southeastern Conference and Big Ten Conference began work on preventing concussions and appointed University of Mississippi Chancellor Dan Jones to evaluate and review existing research and various diagnoses from past analyses 89 In 2009 an NCAA panel created and recommended a rule that prevents athletes from returning to a game after sustaining a concussion The panel also had recommended for an athlete to be sidelined after any concussion related injury until the athlete was cleared by a doctor 90 Under the new plan all student athletes must sign statements saying that they will report all signs and symptoms of concussions to their coaches In addition all athletes must have baseline cognitive testing while the post injury cognitive testing is strongly recommended The athletes diagnosed with concussions must be removed from sports for a minimum of one day and can only return when decided by a team physician There s been less focus on college players who don t go on to play professional sports but I think you ll see that getting more attention and go down to people who play it at every level From time to time we have all had concerns of what we ask student athletes to do and what the long term health may be 91 University of Mississippi Chancellor Dan JonesConcussions in other leagues editNCAA Football edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message In the 2003 football season there were a reported 184 concussions out of the 4251 athletes that participated in that specific football season That is 6 3 of college football players have reported having a concussion This number does not include the athletes that fail to report they had a concussion Out of these athletes that reported their concussion and sat out of competition until released to participate again 6 5 of these athletes had another concussion occur in the same season Concussions are known to be one of the most common injuries in College Football this is because of the constant contact to these athletes head Another reason these concussions are very likely to happen is because once a concussion is sustained it is very likely to happen again In fact an athlete that has sustained a concussion has a 35 1 chance of this injury reoccurring The teams athletic trainers have specific guidelines for when their athletes sustain a concussion and they must follow these guidelines when diagnosing a concussion and also releasing a player to play after the initial diagnosis of the concussion Failure to follow the specific concussion protocol will result in harsh punishment against the university The athletic trainers do not have a specific guideline to how long it takes for their athletes to recover from these concussions when they feel their athlete is ready to undergo protocol to return to play is when they will test if their athlete is healthy enough to participate Players that have suffered from the concussion the average of their age was 19 5 years of age and they had an estimated 8 4 years of experience Players that have suffered two or more concussions were slightly younger at 19 1 years of age and had some more experience at 9 1 years of participation This supports the statement that athletes with more exposure to these helmet to helmet hits will be more prone to concussions For example a quarterback that is hit the least amount on the football fields only suffers concussions around 5 6 of the reported concussions opposed to offensive linemen that suffer about 20 9 of the reported concussions Canadian Football League edit In the 2010 season for the Canadian Football League there have been 50 reported concussions 44 8 percent of players reported having a concussion or concussion like symptoms 16 9 percent had confirmed that they had a concussion and 69 6 percent of all players who suffered from concussions that year suffered from more than one 92 However the average of 0 59 concussions per game is lower than the 0 67 recorded by the NFL in 2010 93 The league eventually started a concussion awareness program with the help of Football Canada Canadian Interuniversity Sport CIS the Canadian School Sport Federation the Canadian Football League Players Association CFLPA the Canadian Football League Alumni Association CFLAA and the ThinkFirst program 94 The league eventually pointed out eight protocols 95 Team physicians and therapists are to use a SCAT2 a medical protocol to diagnose concussions and preventing athletes from playing until they have been cleared to play All players are to be submitted to IMPACT which is a form of cognitive testing during training camp All player concussion assessments in the CFL are to only be used by team physicians and therapists All coaches and players will receive educational items to aid in recognizing signs of a concussion Administrators are to report a change from the expectation that a player returns to the game to one that encourages players to be honest about symptoms The formation of certification programs that teach coaches how to recognize the symptoms of concussions The formation of training programs for coaches that emphasize that players should never use their helmets to tackle A new rule in the amateur football rulebook was implemented that requires officials to report suspected concussed players to the coaching or medical staff during games In 2012 ThinkFirst founder and Toronto Western Hospital neurosurgeon Charles Tator led a study that was conducted by the University of Toronto which examined the brains of 20 former players with a history of concussions and compared them to 20 other players without a history of head injury A separate group of 20 without football experience served as a control group Also in 2012 the league and Tator announced a partnership to work in a study that would perform postmortem tests on former CFL players to look for signs of CTE 96 Arena Football League edit In the Arena Football League despite the league s intense play very few lawsuits have been filed for concussions The most notable lawsuit against the league was a lawsuit filed by former Colorado Crush kicker Clay Rush in 2010 who claimed that he suffered from permanent brain damage due to repeated blows to the head during games 97 Like the NFL the AFL prohibits players who suffered from concussions from practicing 98 In 2008 during the original league s final season the Shockometer made its debut at two season opening games Dallas Desperados vs Georgia Force San Jose SaberCats vs Chicago Rush on 40 player helmets The device is projected to sell for 30 if it is to become available on the market 99 The players that were given the device play positions that are susceptible to hard hits such as wide receivers defensive backs running backs and linebackers AFL Players Association regional director James Guidry stated that the red light does not mean that the player has a concussion but as a warning for team examiners to inspect the player Guidry also said that the device could be used to prevent players who do not want to show any signs of weakness after sustaining any concussion like symptoms from continuing to play 100 What happens in a game is much different than what happens in lab situations To be able to have a partner like the AFL that values this project as much as we do is fantastic We can learn an awful lot and make this product as good as it can be before it s winding up on the field in widespread use 99 Dave Rossi of Schutt Sports on the Shockometer Youth football edit Youth athletes make up 70 of football players in the United States Every year there are 23 000 nonfatal traumatic brain injuries stemming from playing football that required an emergency visit to the hospital Of those visits 90 of them are children between the ages of 5 18 years old 101 A study conducted from 2010 to 2014 showed that of the 529 million emergency room visits 819 000 were contact sport related This accounted for 0 15 of all emergency visits This number although small may affect and cause ramifications in the American healthcare system These figures are represented with nearly 80 90 of that of the youth population ages 7 18 102 One of the first studies of its kind was performed during the Fall 2011 football season when researchers from Virginia Tech receiving permission from parents placed accelerometers which measure g forces inside the helmets of seven youth players These seven players were 7 and 8 year old boys participating in a community youth league who were chosen because they were expected to have high participation and also because they wore at least a youth medium Riddell Revolution helmet enabling the accelerometers battery and wireless transmitter to fit inside the helmet within the padding That is these seven were not a random selecting of players Rather the purpose of this study was to establish a baseline of what range of hits are generally expected 103 As way of comparison a collision of 80g is a big hit in a college football game of which there might be only six per game And the range of 80 90 or 100g is generally where risk of acute injury and concussion begins to occur concussion being symptoms such as feeling foggy or woozy and not necessarily loss of consciousness An example of a lesser force of 40g is heading a soccer ball and even with blows in this 30 to 40g range it is not known whether these pose a cumulative risk of injury 103 This 2011 study measured a total 753 impacts among these seven players with a median impact of 15g It did however observe 38 impacts of 40g or greater and six impacts of greater than 80g Fortunately none of these youth players experienced a concussion There is also a concern that since many young players have less developed chest and neck muscles than older players almost every impact potentially acts likes a surprise hit 103 A Virginia Tech doctor stated that reducing the number of higher hits during practice sessions constitutes a real opportunity Of the 38 impacts of 40g or greater 29 took place during practice And of the six impacts greater than 80g all took place during practice 103 One Pop Warner game in particular in 2012 resulted in five concussions 104 In 2015 a family sued Pop Warner over the suicide of a former player who was later found to have CTE claiming that the organization knew or should have known about the risk of head injuries 105 Several other lawsuits have been filed against Pop Warner for related cases 106 107 The Center for Disease Control and Preventions CDC s has developed the Heads Up concussion in Youth Sports It helps youth coaches players and parents be more aware of a concussion Heads up provides important information on preventing recognizing and responding to a concussion 63 of youth coaches viewed concussions being more serious 72 said they are educating others about concussions and 50 had learned something new 108 According to the Boston University School of Medicine BUSM kids who begin playing football before the age of twelve are at a greater risk of depression behavioral regulation apathy and executive functioning Michael Alosco PhD lead author for the BUSM states This study adds to growing research suggesting that incurring repeated head impacts through tackle football before the age of 12 can lead to a greater risk for short and long term neurological consequences 109 Concussions in high school football edit Concussions are frequent in high school football Football has the highest rate of concussion among high school sports with about 11 concussions occurring per 10 000 athletic exposures 110 About 50 high school or younger football players across the country were killed or sustained serious head injuries on the field since 1997 111 Many concussions that occur during high school football often go untreated and are not monitored This is a big concern because repeated trauma to the head especially injuries with concussion like symptoms puts a young athlete s health at serious risk 112 A 2013 study by Cincinnati Children s Hospital Medical Center found that despite knowing the risk of serious injury from continuing to play with a concussion half of high school football players would still play if they had a headache from an injury sustained on the field Researchers surveyed 120 high school football players Of those students 30 reported having suffered a concussion More than 90 percent recognized the risk of serious injury if they returned to play too quickly but more than half of those aware of the risks responded they would always or sometimes continue to play with a headache sustained from an injury and only 54 percent indicated they would always or sometimes report symptoms of a concussion to their coach 113 Another study found that 15 8 of football players who sustain a concussion severe enough to cause loss of consciousness return to play the same day Due to the fact that only 42 of high schools have access to athletic training services there has been a large debate regarding the risks that high school football players face 114 Eleven high schools in North Central Florida agreed to take a written questionnaire evaluating the varsity football teams knowledge about concussions The study was approved by the Institutional Review Board for the Protection of Human Research Subjects by the University of Florida The review consisted of three sections First was to identify symptoms of a concussion second what they believed were possible consequences from not getting the proper treatment of a concussion and the last section was to indicate if they have ever received information about concussions 25 of them had never received information about concussion and only 54 had talked about the issue of a concussion with a parent 115 Prevention efforts editNumerous efforts have attempted to identify potential concussions quickly Helmet shock data loggers and impact sensors help monitor impacts a player receives One example is a device created by Schutt Sports during the Arena Football League s 2008 season known as the Shockometer a triangle shaped object with adhesive on its side that sticks to players helmets When a player gets hit by a g force which exceeds 98 a capsule with a green light in it will change to a red light Doctors have determined that a g force of approximately 100 will increase the risk of a concussion even though a quarterback that gets sacked would normally register a g force of 150 g A possible flaw to the Shockometer is that fan activity could accidentally trigger the device 116 Riddell created the Head Impact Telemetry System HITS and Sideline Response System SRS to help record the frequency and severity of player impacts during practices and games Every HITS helmet features MX Encoders which would automatically record every hit 117 Eight NFL teams had planned to use the system in the 2010 season but it was ultimately not used 40 In 2013 Reebok developed the Head Impact Indicator which is a quarter sized device placed on a player s skull which activates a red yellow light if the player is hit too hard 118 Similarly to Reebok s Impact Indicator Battle Sport Science has released the Impact Indicator 2 0 The Impact Indicator 2 0 looks to increase long term brain safety for all those who play football 119 On February 3 2013 the NFL and General Electric partnered on a five year 50 million project to develop technology to predict brain injuries show injury severity and the rate of recovery and to create more protective material 120 There is now another company that has taken on the responsibility of attempting to limit the number of concussions in the game of football Vicis a Seattle based firm has created a new unique type of helmet that is very flexible due to the many layers that make up this new intricate helmet This helmet consists of four layers beginning with the Lode Shell This layer absorbs the shock from the hit which then leads to the Core Layer contorting and bending in all directions This technology alleviates stress from the impact which consists of all the linear and rotational forces involved in the hit The Arch Shell exists directly under the Core Layer and is precisely designed to fit a player s head shape The last layer the Form Liner works with the Arch Shell to apportion pressure evenly around the perimeter of the head Instead of measuring a player s head the conventional way by taking the circumference Vicis measures the length and width of the head to get more accurate data A better fit of the helmet allows for the technology to work more advantageously 121 Several NFL players have tried this new helmet and have provided great feedback Cliff Avril from the Seattle Seahawks said You don t feel the thuds as hard as they normally are In the NFL s 2017 Helmet Laboratory Testing Performance Results the Vicis helmet finished first out of the 33 helmets that could have been worn in 2017 NFL season Concussion preventing technology continues to improve the safety in the game of football 122 NFL edit Sean Morey who was named cochair of the NFL Player Association s Concussion and Traumatic Brain Injury Committee in October 2009 told Brown Alumni Magazine in early 2010 that fifty percent of concussions go unreported Morey said that players kept their injuries secret because they felt bound by loyalty and feared job loss 123 Since then the National Football League has made numerous rule changes to reduce the number of concussions suffered by players while making the game safer In 2010 the NFL reworded the League s rules to prohibit a player from launching himself off the ground and using his helmet to strike a player in a defenseless posture in the head or neck Violations of this rule only result in the imposition of a 15 yard unnecessary roughness penalty In the same season the NFL mandated that once a player loses his helmet on the playing field the current play must immediately be whistled dead 124 Also in 2010 the NFL mandated that during field goals or extra point attempts defenders must line up with their entire bodies on the outside of the snapper s body to protect the snapper while he is in a position of vulnerability Violations of this rule however result in only a five yard penalty for illegal formation 124 The Competition Committee reviews all competitive aspects of the game including playing rules roster regulations technology game day operations and player protection The process for modifying or adopting rules and regulations is systematic and consensus oriented 125 To reinforce the seriousness of the rule changes in the middle of the 2010 season Commissioner Goodell issued a memo to all NFL teams stating that more significant discipline including suspensions will be imposed on players that strike an opponent in the head or neck area in violation of the rules 126 The most drastic step the NFL has taken to reduce head injuries was the 2010 change to the NFL kickoff rules To reduce what has been referred to as one of the most violent plays in the game the kickoff was moved up from the 30 yard line to the 35 yard line The NFL also outlawed the use of the three man wedge on kickoffs while allowing the two man wedge to remain a legal play Consequently players on the kicking team must now line up closer to midfield reducing the amount of space the players have in which to get a running start 124 In 2011 the NFL also mandated that certified athletic trainers be available in press boxes during all NFL games These athletic trainers assist medical personnel located on the sidelines in identifying potential concussions because the symptoms are often difficult to spot and assess from the field level 124 On March 20 2013 the NFL voted to introduce yet another new rule aimed at player safety Starting in the 2013 2014 season if a running back lowers the crown of his helmet while he is inside the tackle box or while he is less than three yards downfield and makes contact with a defender the team will be given a 15 yard penalty 124 After three years of declines in reported cases the 2015 regular season contained a spike in reported concussions even after making several safety improvements the previous year The total cases reported for the practices pre season and regular season was 271 a 31 6 percent spike The 2015 cases reported for regular season games was 182 a 58 3 percent spike 127 In the 2016 offseason the NFL implemented a new policy to their concussion protocol The NFL can now punish teams that do not follow their concussion protocol by imposing a monetary fine or taking away their draft picks The first violation can be a fine up to 150 000 and the second violation can be a fine no less than 100 000 and a possible removal of draft picks 128 In 2017 the Seattle Seahawks were under much scrutiny for violating the NFL s concussion protocol by allowing Russell Wilson to return to the game against the Arizona Cardinals without the proper treatment The Seattle Seahawks failed to have Wilson cleared by a team doctor and an independent physician before allowing him to return to the game 129 The NFL investigated the incident and imposed a 100 000 fine on the Seahawks 130 131 WFA edit The Women s Football Alliance has come a long way when it comes to the guidelines on making the game safer for its players From 2012 to 2017 they have since made it illegal to send a player back into the game with suspicions of a concussion unless cleared by a certified health official Youth football edit Return to play guidelines RTPs such as Washington State s Lystedt Law have been legally mandated since 2009 All 50 states and Washington D C have now passed legislation to help reduce the number of traumatic brain injuries in youth football 132 Senator Dick Durbin from Illinois introduced the Protecting Student Athletes from Concussions Act on September 25 2013 to the U S Senate This act would require athletes parents coaches and school officials to be informed of the risks of mild traumatic brain injury mTBI and it would also require the when in doubt sit it out policy to be used with athletes that have been suspected of having a concussion and be removed from the field of play A press release from Senator Durbin stated that many major U S sports organizations including the NFL and NHL endorsed the bill 133 In 2016 the Pop Warner league banned kickoffs in an attempt to reduce high speed collisions that result in concussions 134 Screening procedure edit dubious discuss In September 2015 researchers with the Department of Veterans Affairs and Boston University announced that they had identified CTE in 96 percent of NFL players that they had examined and in 79 percent of all football players 135 As of February 2015 Gary Small and colleagues have been called into question by the FDA for their overzealous commercialization and promotion of clinically unproven screening that fellow peer researchers deem fit only for research and they have responded by withdrawing related materials from their website 136 137 To date all screening procedures that examine football players for brain damage have been post mortem In 2013 Gary Small and colleagues developed an in vivo chemical tracer that can detect tau protein build up in living players Small and his team invented this new chemical tracer 2 1 6 2 F 18 fluoroethyl methyl amino 2 naphthyl ethylidene malononitrile or FDDNP that could be used in Positron Emission Tomography PET scans 138 This new tracer measures for tau protein and amyloid plaque accumulation in human brains symptoms of repetitive brain trauma among other things Although tracers have been developed to screen for the build up of tau proteins in the human brain FDDNP is the first PET tracer that can be used in vivo in human trials FDDNP was originally developed in an effort to detect Alzheimer s in elderly individuals thus the article was published in the journal of the American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry However because there are similarities between Alzheimer s and the effects of Chronic Traumatic Encephelopathy CTE FDDNP was used to study the extent of brain trauma in consenting retired NFL players Small and colleagues performed a controlled experiment on retired NFL players and an equal number of control participants Unfortunately the sample size was very small as only 5 players of the 19 contacted were eligible for the study Though the sample size was small a good range of positions were represented linebacker quarterback offensive lineman defensive lineman and a center and all players had played in the league at least 10 years The players had to be at least 45 years of age and currently exhibit symptoms of cognitive and mood disruption Control participants had to meet certain criteria as well to ensure that they were as similar as possible to the NFL players in order to eliminate any biases or confounding variables Age Body Mass Index BMI years of education and family history of dementia were all selected as the selection criteria for control participants All participants received intravenous injections of the FDDNP tracer and were tested over 4 weeks using PET imaging technology The injection of the FDDNP tracer was successful and the results of the study showed significant differences between the NFL players and control participants The NFL players had significantly higher FDDNP signals than control participants indicating a greater amount of tau protein accumulation The cortical regions of all the participants studied showed no significant difference but the NFL players had FDDNP levels that were significantly higher in the caudate putamen thalamus sub thalamus midbrain and cerebellar white matter regions of the brain as compared to the control participants 138 In addition a positive correlation was found between the number of head injuries the players sustained and the levels of FDDNP binding This suggests that players with a more severe history of head trauma will likely have significantly more accumulation of tau protein This in turn gives rise to the suggestion that a more severe history of head trauma will result in greater deterioration of the brain cognitive functioning and mood regulation The findings of the study were consistent with previous autopsy studies of individuals with CTE The important distinction to make however is that the patients in Small s study were not on the slab and walked out after testing was completed This is monumental in the field of brain trauma and concussion research Based on recent new blood tests evidence is revealing no change in blood plasma tau and serum neurofilament light concentrations following sport related concussions However these levels did rise in more severe concussion sport related injuries This can potentially suggest that a new blood test be developed and help aid in identifying the severity of concussion and assist in concussion protocols 139 Recovery efforts editConcussions are proven to cause loss of brain function This can lead to physical and emotional symptoms such as attention disorders depression headaches nausea and amnesia These symptoms can last for days or weeks and even after the symptoms have gone the brain still will not be completely normal Players with multiple concussions can have drastically worsened symptoms and exponentially increased recovery time Researchers at UCLA used a brain imaging tool to identify a certain protein found in five retired NFL players The presence and accumulation of tau proteins found in the five living players are associated with Alzheimer s disease Previously this type of exam could only be performed with an autopsy Scientists at UCLA created a chemical marker that binds to the abnormal proteins and they are able to view this with positron emission tomography PET scan Researcher at UCLA Gary Small explains Providing a non invasive method for early detection is a critical first step in developing interventions to prevent symptom onset and progression in CTE 140 Post concussive symptoms PCS is an area of recovery that is often not discussed New evidence suggest that new recovery protocols have been recommended and designed to more adequately and efficiently recover from concussions PCS is a concussion symptom lasting longer than 14 days Current protocols suggest that the athlete refrain from any physical activity until symptoms free However according to the Journal of Athletic Training a physiological approach to prolonged recovery from sport related concussion suggests some aerobic activity may be beneficial to more appropriate healing from concussion and may lessen the reoccurrence of repeated concussions 141 There has been promising evidence that blood flow restriction based exercises can be used to improve Post Concussion Syndrome PCS The leading theory supporting this is that human growth hormone is released in response to increased lactate production from exercise enhancing the brain function and recovery This exercise based program could potentially be used in conjunction with aerobic therapy to better improve concussion symptoms during the recovery process 142 As of 2011 all 32 NFL teams are required to have at least one Physical Therapist on staff Physical Therapist can help with current and former NFL players that have experienced a concussion A Vestibular Physical Therapist can create customized treatment for dizziness and balance dysfunction associated with a concussion 143 See also edit nbsp American football portal nbsp College football portal nbsp Philosophy portal Chronic traumatic encephalopathy in sports National Football League controversies Steroid use in American football Health issues in American football Concussions in sport Concussions in Australian sport Helmet to helmet collision Bounty Bowl New Orleans Saints bounty scandal League of Denial Concussion 2015 film Concussions in rugby union The Hit Chuck Bednarik List of NFL players with chronic traumatic encephalopathyReferences edit Meehan III William 2017 concussions Santa Barbara California ISBN 9781440838941 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link The grim list of football players with CTE continues to grow kansascity Retrieved 2017 04 05 Branch John 2016 02 03 Ken Stabler a Magnetic NFL Star Was Sapped of Spirit by C T E The New York Times Retrieved 2017 04 05 Tagge C A Fisher A M Minaeva O V Gaudreau Balderrama A Moncaster J A Zhang X L Wojnarowicz M W Casey N Lu H Kokiko Cochran O N Saman S Ericsson M Onos K D Veksler R Senatorov V V Kondo A Zhou X Z Miry O Vose L R Goldstein L E 2018 Concussion microvascular injury and early tauopathy in young athletes after impact head injury and an impact concussion mouse model Brain 141 2 422 458 https doi org 10 1093 brain awx350 BU Researchers Find CTE in 99 of Former NFL Players Studied The Brink Boston University 26 July 2017 Willigenburg N W Borchers J R Quincy R Kaeding C C Hewett T E 2016 Comparison of Injuries in American Collegiate Football and Club Rugby A Prospective Cohort Study Nienke W Willigenburg James R Borchers Richard Quincy Christopher C Kaeding Timothy E Hewett 2016 The American Journal of Sports Medicine 44 3 753 60 doi 10 1177 0363546515622389 PMID 26786902 S2CID 21829142 The Common Types of Football Injuries 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High School Football Players Implications for Prevention Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine 14 1 13 7 doi 10 1097 00042752 200401000 00003 PMID 14712161 S2CID 15083145 Study raises concerns that teen athletes continue to play with concussion symptoms Press release Cincinnati Children s Hospital Medical Center 2013 05 06 Retrieved 2013 09 03 Statistics on Youth Sports Safety Cleared to Play Archived from the original on 18 December 2014 Retrieved 2 December 2014 Cournoyer Janie Tripp Brady L Sep Oct 2014 Concussion Knowledge in High School Football Players Journal of Athletic Training 49 5 654 658 doi 10 4085 1062 6050 49 3 34 PMC 4208870 PMID 25162779 Indicator on AFL helmets ESPN 2008 02 28 Retrieved 2015 10 04 HITS Technology Riddell Archived from the original on 2012 06 23 Retrieved 2012 06 26 Sauser Brittany 2007 09 10 A helmet that detects hard hits National Football League Retrieved 2015 10 04 Goldman Tom Can That Mouth Guard Really Prevent a Concussion NPR org Retrieved 2013 11 14 Copeland Kareem 2013 02 03 Report NFL partners with GE for concussion research National Football League Retrieved 2013 02 03 Flexible football helmet absorbs hits like a car bumper could put an end to concussions digitaltrends com 4 April 2017 Seattle Seahawks players talk about their experience wearing new high tech Vicis helmet geekwire com 28 August 2017 Morton Gordon January February 2010 Helmet to Helmet Brown Alumni Magazine p 14 a b c d e Thomas Drysdale 13 December 2013 Helmet to Helmet Contact Avoiding a Lifetime Penalty by Creating a Duty to Scan Active NFL Players for Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy Journal of Legal Medicine 34 4 425 452 doi 10 1080 01947648 2013 859969 PMID 24328519 S2CID 24595682 playsmartplaysafe com Coaching For Change Rule Changes Designed to Improve Health and Safety website Goodell issues memo enforcing player safety rules National Football League 2012 07 26 Retrieved 2014 11 11 Shpigel Ben 29 January 2016 Diagnoses of Concussions Increase by Nearly a Third Over Last Season New York Times New York Retrieved 31 January 2016 New York Times website What is the NFL s concussion protocol si com 16 September 2016 Seahawks violated NFL concussion protocol by not examining Russell Wilson per report sbnation com 2017 11 12 Report Seahawks still haven t heard from NFL on investigation 247sports com Maske Mark December 21 2017 Seattle Seahawks fined 100 000 for violating NFL concussion protocol with Russell Wilson The Washington Post Retrieved October 14 2018 Bachynski Kathleen 2014 Youth Sports amp Public Health Framing Risks of Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in American Football and Ice Hockey Journal of Law Medicine and Ethics 42 3 323 33 doi 10 1111 jlme 12149 PMID 25264090 S2CID 39629829 Bachynski Kathleen 2014 Youth Sports amp Public Health Framing Risks of Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in American Football and Ice Hockey Journal of Law Medicine amp Ethics 42 Fall 2014 325 doi 10 1111 jlme 12149 PMID 25264090 S2CID 39629829 Belson Ken May 12 2016 Pop Warner Bans Kickoffs in Hopes of Protecting Its Youngest Players The New York Times Retrieved June 23 2018 Breslow Jason New 87 Deceased NFL Players Test Positive for Brain Disease Frontline Retrieved 9 January 2016 Zarembo Alan Apr 10 2015 FDA forces UCLA researchers to stop touting experimental dementia scan LA Times Warning Letters and Notice of Violation Letters PDF FDA Feb 15 2015 Restrict promotional claims of safety or effectiveness of the drug for a use for which it is under investigation and to preclude commercialization of the drug before it is approved for commercial distribution a b Small G W 2013 PET Scanning of Brain Tau in Retired National League Football Players Preliminary Findings The American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry 21 2 138 144 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 372 2960 doi 10 1016 j jagp 2012 11 019 PMID 23343487 New Biomarkers Study Results Reported from University of British Columbia No change in plasma tau and serum concentrations in adolescent athletes following sport related concussions Obesity Fitness amp Wellness November 2018 First Imaging Study of Concussion Related Abnormal Brain Proteins In Retired NFL Players Medical News Today Retrieved 1 December 2013 Leddy John March 2017 A physiological approach to prolonged recovery from sport related concussion Journal of Athletic Training 52 3 299 308 doi 10 4085 1062 6050 51 11 08 PMC 5384826 PMID 28387557 Wu Yi Ning 2016 Stable recovery after aerobic exercise with limb blood flow restriction and cooling in individuals with post concussion syndrome Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Clinics of North America 437 54 Boriboon Kia February 2013 Concussion management in football don t shake it off the effects of sports related concussions can last for decades physical therapists can play an important role in concussion detection and intervention Academic One File External links edit nbsp Wikiversity is calling for essays on Concussions in Sports Concussion Info PDF Heads Up Youth Sports 5 March 2019 Concussions Cause Long Term Effects Lasting Decades Medical News Today 9 June 2015 Culverhouse Gay 2012 Throwaway Players Behler Publications p 152 ISBN 978 1933016702 Health of the Game Part 2 Helmet research turning heads at Va Tech nflevolution com 2012 11 14 Cook Kevin 2012 09 11 Dying to Play The New York Times Retrieved 4 December 2012 Fainaru Wada Mark Fainaru Steve 2014 League of Denial The NFL Concussions and the Battle for Truth Three Rivers Press ISBN 978 0770437565 League of Denial The NFL s Concussion Crisis PBS Frontline Season 2013 Episode 2 Powers Martine The broken promises of the NFL s concussion settlement Washington Post February 6 2024 podcast 22 min Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Concussions in American football amp oldid 1219574579 Federal NFL concussion litigation, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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