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He returned to the NFL with the Cleveland Browns and played his last five years in Green Bay, winning two more NFL championships with the Packers.
After he was done playing, Carpenter embarked on an even longer coaching career, making stops in Minnesota, Atlanta, Washington, St. Louis, Houston, Green Bay, Detroit and Philadelphia in the NFL; at Southwest Texas State in college and the Frankfurt Galaxy of the World League of American Football.
Carpenter was never diagnosed with a concussion, to the best of his family's knowledge. He did not have evidence of Alzheimer's disease or any other neurodegenerative disease.
"Concussions are underreported even now, and were hardly ever discussed back in Carpenter's day," Stern said.
Said Cantu: "Over the course of his very long career, he undoubtedly took tens of thousands of subconcussive blows."
But his family began to notice signs of trouble. And the answers they were getting from his doctors didn't explain it.
"We didn't even know anything about CTE until my dad passed away," Carpenter's daughter, Lisa Prewitt, told the AP. "Knowing that he did have CTE, a lot of those things started to make sense."
Prewitt said her father would ask five times in the car to the doctor where they were going. "Then he arrived at the doctor's office and they started talking about football and he remembered every detail," she said.
"Looking back, if anybody along the line would have known that there was something so significant and he had it, there could have been a whole different approach to his care."
That's what researchers are hoping, too.
For now, CTE can only be diagnosed by a posthumous brain exam. Stern is hoping to develop a test that would identify the disease in living people, if not to treat it -- there's no treatment yet -- at least to tailor the person's care in a way that can keep them from disintegrating into depression and perhaps suicide.
"In order for us to really understand that, we need to be able to study people while they're alive," Stern said. "That, for me, is really the next step."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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