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Researchers Find CTE in 345 of 376 Former NFL Players Studied
Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine ^ | Monday, February 6th, 2023 | Boston University CTE Center

Posted on 03/21/2023 6:18:58 AM PDT by JSM_Liberty

The Boston University CTE Center announced today that they have now diagnosed 345 former NFL players with chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) out of 376 former players studied (91.7 percent). Among those diagnosed in the last year are two former players who once represented the teams paired in this Sunday’s Super Bowl LVII matchup – former Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Rick Arrington, who played three seasons for the Eagles from 1970-73, and former Kansas City Chiefs defensive tackle Ed Lothamer, who played for the Chiefs in the very first Super Bowl and was a member of their winning team in Super Bowl IV.

For comparison, a 2018 Boston University study of 164 brains of men and women donated to the Framingham Heart Study found that only 1 of 164 (0.6 percent) had CTE. The lone CTE case was a former college football player. The extremely low population rate of CTE is in line with similar studies from brain banks in Austria, Australia and Brazil.

The NFL player data should not be interpreted to suggest that 91.7 percent of all current and former NFL players have CTE, as brain bank samples are subject to selection biases. The prevalence of CTE among NFL players is unknown as CTE can only be definitively diagnosed after death. Repetitive head impacts appear to be the chief risk factor for CTE, which is characterized by misfolded tau protein that is unlike changes observed from aging, Alzheimer’s disease, or any other brain disease.

“While the most tragic outcomes in individuals with CTE grab headlines, we want to remind people at risk for CTE that those experiences are in the minority,” said Ann McKee, MD, director of the BU CTE Center and chief of neuropathology at VA Boston Healthcare System. “Your symptoms, whether or not they are related to CTE, likely can be treated, and you should seek medical care. Our clinical team has had success treating former football players with mid-life mental health and other symptoms.”

McKee and her team are inviting former athletes, including women, to participate in research studies designed to learn how to diagnose and treat CTE. The BU CTE Center is collaborating with its education and advocacy partner the Concussion Legacy Foundation (CLF) to recruit former football players and other contact sport athletes to five active clinical studies.

One of the studies, Project S.A.V.E., is recruiting men and women ages 50 or older who played 5+ years of a contact sport, including American football, ice hockey, soccer, lacrosse, boxing, full contact martial arts, rugby and wrestling.

S.A.V.E. stands for Study of Axonal and Vascular Effects from repetitive head impacts. The major goal is to determine how repeated head impacts from playing contact sports can lead to long-term thinking, memory and mood problems. The results could highlight strategies to treat and prevent symptoms associated with head impacts from contact sports. To learn more about Project S.A.V.E. and four other studies enrolling participants, click here. To sign up for future clinical studies, enroll in the CLF research registry.

In addition, patients and families who believe they or a loved one has symptoms that may be related to prior concussions or CTE are encouraged to reach out to the CLF HelpLine, which provides referrals to doctors and care providers, educational resources, one-on-one peer support, and monthly online support groups.

“I miss my hero dearly,” said Jill Arrington, Rick Arrington’s daughter and former CBS/FOX/ESPN sideline reporter. “It pains me to know his life was cut short by the sport he loved most. As a brain donor, part of his legacy is in this research, and I want all former football players to know how important it is to contribute and sign-up for studies so Boston University CTE Center researchers and their collaborators around the world can learn how to treat, and one day cure, the disease that devastated our family.”

Research on CTE has advanced considerably over the past five years, and the BU CTE Center soon will publish its 182nd study on CTE. In part because of advances in research on CTE, in October 2022 the National Institutes of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), a branch of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), updated their position on what causes CTE: “CTE is a delayed neurodegenerative disorder that was initially identified in postmortem brains and, research-to-date suggests, is caused in part by repeated traumatic brain injuries.”

“We’d like to thank our 1,330 donor families for teaching us what we now know about CTE, and our team and collaborators around the world working to advance diagnostics and treatments for CTE,” McKee said.


TOPICS: Health/Medicine; Sports
KEYWORDS:
As the article mentions there is clearly a selection bias but the very low percentage from the Framiningham Study (1 of 164) suggest that CTE is otherwiae not common.
1 posted on 03/21/2023 6:18:58 AM PDT by JSM_Liberty
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To: JSM_Liberty

You mean that repeated hits to the head might lead to long term brain damage?

Gee. What a revelation.


2 posted on 03/21/2023 6:24:48 AM PDT by Responsibility2nd (Donald Trump is a setting sun. Ron DeSantis is a rising star.)
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To: JSM_Liberty

Odd, what next finding pro boxers with cte injuries.


3 posted on 03/21/2023 6:26:48 AM PDT by Theoria
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To: JSM_Liberty

Regardless, you can expect the nfl to go full flag football sometime in the future.....because of cte and a myriad of other types of injuries, flag solves so many headaches. (No pun intended)

There’s a reason they ran that model in the pro bowl......a trial ballon to see if fans would accept the format.

They even took an informal poll of fans at the game and put it on the air......most if not all favorable of course.


4 posted on 03/21/2023 6:28:46 AM PDT by V_TWIN (America...so great even the people that hate it refuse to leave!)
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To: V_TWIN

Regardless, you can expect the nfl to go full flag football sometime in the future.....because of cte and a myriad of other types of injuries, flag solves so many headaches. (No pun intended)


That should be good news for the NHL-—

and someone ought to start a league for Canada’s national sport-—lacrosse (Canada actually has two national sports)—which has been described as being like hockey, but with fighting.


5 posted on 03/21/2023 6:32:05 AM PDT by Hieronymus
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To: Responsibility2nd

In context, it also leads to a hefty bank balance. Cost-benefit analysis


6 posted on 03/21/2023 6:32:58 AM PDT by Hieronymus
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To: V_TWIN

I have only watched the pro bowl game once in my life. All I remember is that it seemed unimportant. Probably over 30 years ago. It was like an honorary gig. If they start the flag football stuff, it’s going to lose even more audience, isn’t it?


7 posted on 03/21/2023 6:35:23 AM PDT by FamiliarFace (I got my own way of livin' But everything gets done With a southern accent Where I come from. TP)
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To: FamiliarFace

Not sure but millions of folks live their lives vicariously through their favorite team and or players.....sadly those folks would probably go along with it regardless.

I wrote the nfl off years ago, even before the kneeling idiocy.

Saw the woke coming a mile away.....nascar too for that matter.


8 posted on 03/21/2023 6:41:24 AM PDT by V_TWIN (America...so great even the people that hate it refuse to leave!)
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To: JSM_Liberty

My wife is watching me carefully for signs of CTE.... played D1 and professional football, rugby for 5 years, and hockey for most of my life in Canada. I can’t remember a football game that I didn’t have a searing headache afterwards. We were taught to lead with our head when we hit people back then.Countless times of getting my bell run. Three major concussions. Coach would make you sit down for 5 minutes shake it off and get back in there. My teaching associates haven’t noticed anything unusual yet and my behavior, but it does haunt you.


9 posted on 03/21/2023 6:57:35 AM PDT by Theophilus 7
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To: V_TWIN
Regardless, you can expect the nfl to go full flag football sometime in the future.

Jetson's Night Out

Robot Football League.

10 posted on 03/21/2023 7:08:57 AM PDT by IYAS9YAS (There are two kinds of people: Those who can extrapolate from incomplete data.)
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To: JSM_Liberty

The NFL is a business that sells brats, beer and merch, they do that by fielding a game where grown men chase a ball around a field, the game is a vehicle for stadium money, tv money, radio money, concessions, and clothing lines. Once you realize that the game and player safety comes second all professional sports begin to shrink into insignificance.


11 posted on 03/21/2023 7:21:03 AM PDT by The Louiswu
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To: Theophilus 7
"played D1 and professional football, rugby for 5 years,"

Rugby is trying to reduce the number of head collisions. They come down hard on any tackle that makes head contact but I think that even tackles that don't make direct contact with the head can still cause damage. It is hard to prevent head movement in tackles or when you hit the ground.
12 posted on 03/21/2023 7:35:46 AM PDT by JSM_Liberty
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To: JSM_Liberty

It is still not clear what contacts or types of damage cause the damage that results in CTE, nor whether that is related to age when taking the damage.

As for self-selection, this study is extremely self-selected, so while informative in a general sense, we also have to recognize the current limitations and encourage something closer to a randomized sample.


13 posted on 03/21/2023 7:57:00 AM PDT by lepton ("It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into"--Jonathan Swift)
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To: JSM_Liberty
The reason the CTE stuff is becoming news again is because the NFL's anti-white message is fading.

First they tried to use CTE to ban football. When that didn't work they made the racist kneeling and BLM a thing in the NFL to alienate the fan base. That worked some, the NFL owners got the message, and now the owners are making the racist message fade back. Thus, CTE has to be tried again.

I'm not a NFL fan. In my state we love college football on Saturdays and leave Sundays for church. But I pay attention whenever the Dims look for any reason to keep Americans from getting together in events that are steeped in patriotism and masculinity.

14 posted on 03/21/2023 8:05:43 AM PDT by Tell It Right (1st Thessalonians 5:21 -- Put everything to the test, hold fast to that which is true.)
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To: Theophilus 7

If you are worried about incipient CTE. Then do your research. There are supplements you can take.

FWIW-— https://www.optimallivingdynamics.com/blog/a-powerful-protocol-proven-to-help-reverse-brain-damage


15 posted on 03/21/2023 8:13:15 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: Theophilus 7

An early sign of CTE is long run on paragraphs...

;-)


16 posted on 03/21/2023 8:13:18 AM PDT by cgbg (Claiming that laws and regs that limit “hate speech” stop freedom of speech is “hate speech”.)
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To: Tell It Right

“now the owners are making the racist message fade back”

Too late—I only allow folks to stab me in the back once.


17 posted on 03/21/2023 8:14:27 AM PDT by cgbg (Claiming that laws and regs that limit “hate speech” stop freedom of speech is “hate speech”.)
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To: Responsibility2nd

Research on CTE has advanced considerably over the past five years, and the BU CTE Center soon will publish its 182nd study on CTE. In part because of advances in research on CTE, in October 2022 the National Institutes of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), a branch of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), updated their position on what causes CTE: “CTE is a delayed neurodegenerative disorder that was initially identified in postmortem brains and, research-to-date suggests, is caused in part by repeated traumatic brain injuries.”


https://www.bumc.bu.edu/busm/2023/03/06/age-of-first-exposure-to-tackle-football-and-years-played-associated-with-less-white-matter-in-brain/

CTE is a progressive neurodegenerative disease frequently found in contact sports athletes. However, many former contact sports athletes suffer from thinking problems and impulsive behavior in the absence of CTE, or with very mild CTE. This new study suggests that a separate type of brain damage, which can appear earlier than CTE, may underlie some of these symptoms.

“Damage to the white matter may help explain why football players appear more likely to develop cognitive and behavioral problems later in life, even in the absence of CTE,” said corresponding author Thor Stein, MD, PhD, a neuropathologist at VA Boston Healthcare System and assistant professor of pathology and laboratory medicine at Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine.

The researchers studied the brains of 205 deceased American football players donated to the Veterans Affairs-Boston University-Concussion Legacy Foundation (VA-BU-CLF) Brain Bank and measured levels of myelin, a component of white matter that covers, protects and speeds up the connections in the brain. They then interviewed family members on measures of cognition and impulsivity and then compared how career length and age of beginning tackle football related to levels of myelin, and how myelin levels related to cognition and impulsivity. In addition to more years of football played, the researchers found that starting tackle football at a younger age was also related to more white matter loss, independent of career length.


https://www.bumc.bu.edu/busm/2023/03/13/early-cte-disease-process-mechanistically-different-than-what-occurs-in-late-stages/

The brains of people who die with CTE are marked by the accumulation of a protein called tau, the same protein found to aggregate in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) brain. The amount of tau pathology in CTE correlates with severity of disease, where early-stage brains have very little pathology and late stage show severe, widespread involvement. The amount of RHI exposure, which for athletes can be measured in terms of the number of years they played a violent sport, as well as genetic risk variants influence the extent of tau pathology and associated disease severity. However, the molecular and genetic mechanisms that underly the development disease, and to what extent those effects are consistent throughout disease progression, are poorly understood.

...

The researchers generated gene expression data for each individual and then performed bioinformatic and statistical analyses of the different subsets of these samples to look for gene expression patterns that are associated with different clinical, histological and genetic markers that are relevant to CTE. They then identified genes and biological processes associated with total years of play as a measure of exposure, amount of tau pathology present at time of death, and the presence of APOE and TMEM106B risk variants.

The researchers found substantial gene expression changes were associated with severe disease for most of these factors, primarily implicating diverse, strongly involved neuro-inflammatory and neuro-immune processes. In contrast, low pathology groups had many fewer gene expression changes and neuroimmune or inflammatory processes implicated and showed striking differences for some factors when compared with severe disease.

According to the researchers, if the active disease process in early disease differs substantially from late-stage disease, this could have important implications for both diagnostic and therapeutic targets. “This might explain why therapeutic targets identified from late-stage human tissue have largely failed to influence disease progression in clinical trials for many neurodegenerative diseases. In addition, if there are distinct markers of early disease progression that are absent in late disease, this would provide an opportunity to explore different diagnostics and biomarkers that we otherwise wouldn’t know to look for,” explained co-corresponding author Thor Stein, MD, PhD, a neuropathologist at VA Boston Healthcare System and associate professor of pathology and laboratory medicine.


18 posted on 03/21/2023 8:15:16 AM PDT by lepton ("It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into"--Jonathan Swift)
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To: JSM_Liberty

But today’s players are less likely to develop CTE. Modern helmet designs, aggressive testing for concussions and much stricter rules regarding tackling has made brain injuries a lot less of an issue.


19 posted on 03/21/2023 10:20:00 AM PDT by RayChuang88 (FairTax: America's Economic Cure)
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To: dennisw

I am grateful. Thank you!


20 posted on 03/21/2023 10:36:19 AM PDT by Theophilus 7
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