| 
			
			 The research, presented at an American Academy of Neurology 
			meeting that began in Vancouver on Monday, is one of the first to 
			provide "objective evidence" of traumatic brain injury in a large 
			sample of National Football League veterans while they are living, 
			said Dr. Francis X. Conidi, one of the study's authors. 
 Conidi, a neurologist at the Florida Center for Headache and Sports 
			Neurology and a faculty member at the Florida State University 
			College of Medicine, said traumatic brain injury was often a 
			"precursor" to CTE, a degenerative brain disease.
 
 "What we do know is that players with traumatic brain injury have a 
			high incidence of going on to develop neurological degenerative 
			disease later on in life," Conidi told Reuters.
 
 CTE, or chronic traumatic encephalopathy, has been found in dozens 
			of the NFL's top players after they died. At present, a CTE 
			diagnosis is only possible after death.
 
			
			 The brain tissue of 59 or 62 deceased former NFL players examined by 
			Boston University's CTE Center have tested positive for CTE, 
			according to its website. The disease, which can lead to aggression 
			and dementia, may have led to the suicides of several NFL athletes, 
			including Hall of Famer Junior Seau.
 In the new study, the largest of its kind, 40 living former players 
			were given sensitive brain scans, known as diffusion tensor imaging 
			(DTI), as well as thinking and memory tests.
 
 "No one has ever looked at this number of (living) players before," 
			Conidi said.
 
 The DTI scans, which measure water flow between parts of the brain, 
			revealed damage in 17 of the men, or 43 percent. That percentage was 
			about three times higher than among the general population, Conidi 
			said. Traditional MRI scans showed signs of damage in 12 ex-players, 
			or 30 percent.
 
 The longer a player was in the league, the greater the likelihood 
			the advanced scan would reveal signs of brain damage, the 
			neurologist said, a correlation that did not show up with 
			traditional scans. With both types of scanning, there was no 
			relationship between the number of diagnosed concussions suffered by 
			a player and signs of brain damage.
 
 [to top of second column]
 | 
            
			 
			That finding suggests the constant banging that players experience 
			during games and practices, especially those playing offensive and 
			defensive line positions, puts them more at risk than the big hits 
			that cause concussions, Conidi told Reuters.
 One way of reducing the danger is by eliminating tackling during 
			practices, Conidi said, a step that some Ivy League football 
			programs have already taken.
 
 Conidi said his study was "one piece of the puzzle" in understanding 
			the link between brain damage and football, the most popular 
			American sport and one that generates billions of dollars in revenue 
			for its players, coaches and owners.
 
 The issue has become the subject of a national conversation in 
			recent years, thanks in part to the 2015 movie "Concussion," 
			starring Will Smith. The film tells the true story of Dr. Bennet 
			Omalu, a Nigerian pathologist who challenged the NFL with his 
			research into CTE suffered by players.
 
 After Omalu published his research, some 5,000 former players sued 
			the NFL over brain injuries, claiming the league concealed the 
			dangers of repeated head trauma. The players agreed to a settlement 
			that could cost the NFL $1 billion, but the deal remains tied up in 
			the courts.
 
 (Reporting By Frank McGurty in New York; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
 
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			
			 |