Fighters
need to learn more about concussion risks, study head says
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[May 06, 2016]
By Philip O'Connor
(Reuters) - Fighters need to learn more
about the risks of concussion, especially during training, to protect
against brain injury, a medic leading a long-term study into head trauma
said.
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With two professional bouts marred by high-profile head injuries in
the past two months, neurologist Dr. Charles Bernick of the
Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health in Las Vegas,
Nevada, said combat sports could never be made completely safe.
But there were clear steps fighters could take to cut down the
risks, he told Reuters in an interview.
"Educate yourself on concussion and head injury," Bernick says, when
asked for his best advice. "Most cumulative injury comes in
training, and sustaining a concussion close to a fight may make a
fighter more vulnerable to be knocked out easier.
"It is important to reduce the exposure to head trauma during
sparring and training."
Brain trauma made headlines on April 9 with the death of Portuguese
mixed martial arts (MMA) fighter Joao Carvalho two days after a bout
in Dublin.
Days later British middleweight boxer Nick Blackwell retired, having
emerged from a coma induced after a title fight against Chris Eubank
Jr in March.
Bernick is in the fifth year of the Professional Fighters Brain
Health Study (PFBHS). Backed by promoters and governing bodies in
MMA and boxing, it tests active and retired fighters to better
understand the effects of repetitive head trauma.
"This includes developing means to detect brain injury early,
determining what factors put an individual at higher risk of
long-term neurological injury," he said.
Carvalho's death and Blackwell's coma led some commentators to
conclude both fights should have been stopped earlier, and there
have been calls for increased regulation of MMA in Ireland.
But Bernick said eliminating danger altogether was not an option.
"There is no question you can institute policy changes that can
reduce the risk of serious injury from head trauma," he said.
"But as long as people get hit in the head, there is no way to
eliminate the risk of concussion."
He said he expected information learned from his study to be applied
to make other contact sports safer too.
Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) has also left its mark on
American Football, and for several years the National Football
League has wrestled with the problem of how to compensate former
players who have the neurological condition, which seems to manifest
itself differently in them.
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"There are definite differences between sports, likely to be related
to the mechanics of the head impact," Bernick said. "Fighters are
more likely than football players to have slurred speech, or
coordination problems.
"However, there are also some common features such as memory
impairment, mood and behavioral changes."
Bernick said the study has identified certain areas of the brain
that seem more vulnerable to injury and developed an iPad-based test
to quickly assess brain performance over time, which the Nevada
State Athletic Commission is to make mandatory for fighters later
this year.
"We have also developed a 'Fight Exposure Score' based on the number
of fights, fights per year, age, education, and the number of times
a fighter has been knocked out which can predict who is a higher
risk of having cognitive impairment," Bernick added.
Last week the medic took his research to Washington where Senator
John McCain expressed support.
"We must make sure that the young men and women who engage in these
sports are not going to put their lives and futures in jeopardy,"
McCain told a media conference.
(Reporting by Philip O'Connor; editing by John Stonestreet)
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