New York Met Jason Bay’s ‘Delayed’ Concussion Likely To Put Him On The DL

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Posted on 29th July 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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The New York Mets aren’t taking any chances with the health of Jason Bay, who sustained a concussion — without knowing it — after running into an outfield wall trying to make a catch. It looks like Bay is going to wind up on the disabled list, the New York Post reported Thursday.

 http://www.nypost.com/p/blogs/metsblog/mets_bay_rests_again_with_concussion_OAqLV4OOypHUe2ihokZk2O

Update: Bay was in fact put on the DL Friday, for 15 days.

http://www.nj.com/mets/index.ssf/2010/07/mets_outfielder_jason_bay_land.html

The left fielder’s case is a good example of why thorough testing and examinations — such as are available now — should be performed to determine the severity of a head injury. That’s a lesson all should have learned from the death last year of actress Natasha Richardson.

Bay ran into the wall last Friday night while playing in Los Angeles, catching a fly ball and holding onto it. But he didn’t start getting any of the symptoms of a concussion, namely a dull headache, until Sunday night, when he was flying home from the road trip to the City of Angels, according to The New York Times.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/28/sports/baseball/28citifield.html?_r=1&ref=sports

Bay apparently mentioned his headaches to his trainers on the plane, but that bit of important news didn’t make its way to Mets manager Jerry Manuel until Tuesday. That was after Bay had gone to a doctor, right before the Mets were ready to play the St. Louis Cardinals at Citi Field.

Manuel pulled Bay out of Tuesday’s lineup, and the $66 million-contract player had not been feeling much better the past few days.

Bay said that this was his first concussion, and that his doctor suggested he might actually have “more of a whiplash,” according to The Times. 

“He said the doctor told him it was uncommon for someone to have delayed symptoms with a concussion,” The Times wrote. 

This is yet another case that doctors need to do a careful evaluation of those who suffer brain injury, particualry those involving symptoms such as amnesia and neurobehaviorial changes.

Ohio Boy Hit In Head By Line Drive Continues To Make Progress

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Posted on 28th July 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Many people who sustain traumatic brain injury make tremendous strides. The human spirit can defy expectations, or the lack of them, as has been the case with young Luke Holko.

On Sept. 2, 2009 Luke was being held by his dad, Chad Holko, watching a minor league baseball game in Niles, Ohio. The Mahoning Valley Scrappers were playing, and 5-year-old Luke and his father were in the front row, by first base, according to a moving story by Fanhouse.com.

http://www.fanhouse.com/2010/07/26/major-gains-for-boy-hit-by-ball-at-minor-league-game/?ncid=webmail

You probably have already figured out what I’m about to tell you. Luke got hit full force in the back of his head by a line drive off the bat of player Ben Carlson. According to Fanhouse, Luke’s cerebellum hit his brain stem from the force of the blow. Doctors put Luke in an induced coma for two days.

He was treated at Akron Children’s Hospital for about a month, and then was transferred to the Cleveland Clinic’s children’s rehab center. He was sent back to the Akron hospital Oct. 30 and finally came home, in a small wheelchair, on Nov. 5, according to Fanhouse.

Physicians didn’t want to give Luke’s father and mother Nicole any long-term prognosis for him. Like many traumatic brain injury patients, Luke had to relearn many tasks, such as how to talk again and how to swallow. His hearing may be returning. He has made a lot of progress since being near-death. 

He went from a wheelchair to a walker in mid-January, and starting walking on his own in May.

Luke’s walking is still not steady. He is off balance, because his brain isn’t sending the proper signals to the nerves in his right leg. He has to get four botox injections every few months in his calf-muscle, according to Fanhouse.  

Carlson, the player whose line drive smashed into Luke’s head, came to visit the boy. They spent about four hours playing together, and had a great time, Fanhouse said, adding that Luke cried when Carlson left.

Here’s wishing that Luke’s progress will continue.

New York Cop Survives,Tries To Move On After Brain Injury From Accident

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Posted on 24th July 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Carlos Olmedo, a police officer in Brooklyn, has had an almost miraculous recovery from a horrendous accident that left him with traumatic brain injury in May.

Olmedo, 31, was chasing down several suspected car thieves in Bensonhurst in the early morning May 16 when he was hit by a motorcycle, according to a profile of him Friday in the New York Daily News.

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2010/07/23/2010-07-23_injured_hero_cop_is_welcomed_home.html

 The young cop says he was thrown 40 feet in the air and landed on his left side. He sustained severe brain injury and was in a coma for 11 days, clinging to life. When Almedo finally regained consciousness, he learned the seriousness of his injury and understood that his recovery would not be easy. At first, he didn’t even remember his infant son.

According to the News, Almedo prayed for a miracle. He was in the hospital for 2 1/2 months, and has made steady progress.

At this point the police officer has undergone brain surgery, and has a dent in the left side of his head “the size of a fist,” according to the News. Physicians have grafted part of his skull bone onto his stomach, and they will reattach that piece of bone to Omedo’s skull this month. 

The police officer, who also had his ankle crushed in the accident, isn’t back to his old self, but is happy to be alive. Olmedo has some memory loss and his speech is slurred a bit, The News reported.  

 The cop returned to his old stationhouse last Thursday, about two months after his near-fatal accident, where he was greeted by his collegues and New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly. It was a hero’s welcome. 

 

Actress Melissa Cunningham Sustains Brain Hemorrhage At VH1’s ‘Celebrity Rehab’

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Posted on 22nd July 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Actress Melissa Cunningham, who was seeking treatment from Dr. Drew Pinsky of VH1’s “Celebrity Rehab,” suffered a brain hemorrhage and was hospitalized this week. But she is now out of the hospital.

http://www.popeater.com/2010/07/22/melissa-cunningham-brain-hemorrhage-jeremy-london/?icid=main|main|dl2|link4|http%3A%2F%2Fwww.popeater.com%2F2010%2F07%2F22%2Fmelissa-cunningham-brain-hemorrhage-jeremy-london%2F

Cunningham is in the process of getting a divorce from troubled actor Jeremy London, and they are both appearing on Dr. Pinsky’s VH1 reality  TV show. 

Cunningham came to Dr. Pinsky’s Pasadena Recovery Center in California last Wednesday for help kicking a prescription pill addiction. London checked into the same rehab center on Sunday.

Cunningham, who was having a difficult time with drug withdrawal, got sick and was taken to the hospital Sunday, the day her husband arrived. She was diagnosed with a brain hemorrhage.

 Radar Online reported that Cunningham has already returned to rehab. She and London were married in 2006, and have a child together. But they are splitting up and getting  a divorce.

London, a substance abuser, has been in the news recently. Last month he alleged, rather conveniently, that he was kidnapped by men who at gunpoint  made  him take methamphetamine and esctasy for 12 hours.    

Baseball Player, Beaned By 93-MPH Ball, Sues MLB, Helmet Maker

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Posted on 21st July 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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An up-and-coming baseball player who was hit in the head with a 93-mph fastball has filed suit against Major League Baseball and his helmet’s manufacturer, according to the New York Post. As in many traumatic brain injury cases, it’s a tragic story.  

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/player_beans_helmet_firm_with_lawsuit_8YjjJoLtJcAhAzFO1yNROP

Jordan Wolf , 25, was playing for the Baltimore Orioles Class A farm team when the accident took place. In 2008 Wolf was beaned in the head. He suffered a skull fracture that went from his ear to the top of his cranium, according to the Post. 

The young player with lots of promise got a brain hemorrhage. He can no longer speak and his has no feeling on the right side of his body. His baseball career is over.

In addition, Wolf has now been diagnosed with epilepsy and has had a number of seizures, the Post wrote.

In his suit, filed in federal court in Manhattan, Wolf is asking for unspecified damages from Rawlings sporting goods and MLB. He alleges that they failed to make sure he had enough protection while he was playing.

 

 

New Jersey Mother, Whose Veteran Son Killed Himself, Outlines What VA Must Do To End Suicides

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Posted on 18th July 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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 Last week  a New Jersey woman named Linda Bean trekked to the nation’s capitol to testify about her son’s suicide two years ago. Army Sgt. Coleman Bean, 26, killed himself after coming back to the states following two tours of duty in Iraq.

 Bean puts the blame for her son’s death squarely on the Department of Veterans Affairs. The VA is not accommodating to vets, she charged, endlessly delaying appointments with her own son, for example. 

Bean was brief, but powerful, in her five minutes of testimony last Wednesday to the House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, getting a standing ovation, according to The Star-Ledger of Newark.

http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/07/nj_mother_of_veteran_who_kille.html

“There are veterans who will tell you that they have had to scrap and right for every VA service they’ve received,” Bean told the subcommittee, The Ledger reported.

She also spoke of the difficulties of using the VA’s website to garner information and get help.

 I’ve been following the topic of soldier suicides because of the enormous number of American troops who are coming home from Iraq and Afghanistan with brain injury, “shell shock”  if you will.  Our soldiers are not just suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, they are suffering from brain injury — subtle or traumatic — and one of its typical after effects, depression. 

You might not think to link brain injury and depression, but I can tell you that many of my brain-injury clients become clinically depressed. So suicide is always a concern of mine. And the VA has been aware of the suicide issue with veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, and been trying to address it, as long ago as 2007.

http://veterans.house.gov/Media/File/110/12-12-07fc/12-12-07fcqfrvaresponse.htm

Right now veterans and service members comprise about 20 percent of the 30,000 U.S. suicides each year, The Ledger reported, citing VA statistics. That translated to 334 active-duty service members killing themselves last year.  

Bean’s son committed suicide two years ago, and in all fairness to the VA , it really has stepped up its assistance to vets since then. As part of an improved outreach program, the VA established a suicide hotline for soldiers. That 800-number has fielded more than 300,000 phone calls and saved 10,000, The Ledger reported.

And the VA just last weak eased its requirements for veterans to received disability payments for PTSD. We will be blogging more about that topic soon.

 But even as the military has tried to help returning veterans, it seems that those efforts are failing. The suicides continue, and some of the Army programs meant to help veterans have come under fire.

 For example, The New York Times recently did an expose of the Army’s Warrior Transition Battalian units, which were set up stateside to help veterans who had suffered serious physical and psychological damage in combat.

https://waiting.com/blog/2010/04/army-trauma-units-are-%e2%80%98worse-than-iraq%e2%80%99-one-solider-charges.html?preview=true&preview_id=386&preview_nonce=2862b2d308

The Times reported that the veterans in these units are essentially being warehoused, not getting counseling and being tormented by those who watch over them. One vet called the transition units worse than Iraq. That doesn’t sound like a set-up that will make a veteran happy to be home. It sounds like a situation that might make a veteran put a gun to his or her head.

And the military appears to be putting its head in the sand in terms of determining which returning veterans sustained brain damage during their tours of duty. U.S. Today recently reported that the military has failed to comply with a directive that they test soldiers before and after they are in combat for brain injury.

https://waiting.com/blog/2010/06/611.html

If the military knows a soldier has brain injury, it can give him or her psychological help, or medications, to ensure he or she don’t get depressed and take their own lives. 

Bean made some sound recommendations to the VA, including suggesting that it establish a group of veterans within the agency to help those just coming home navigate the system’s bureaucracy and red tape. And these veterans can act as a support group for returning troops trying to acclimate themselves to life in the states again.

She also recommended that the VA work more closely with civilian counseling organizations. But the VA doesn’t seem very interested in working with people outside the agency.

For example, the new VA guidelines for PTSD disability mandate that a military doctor, not a civilan physician, certify that a veteran qualifies for benefits. Veterans’ group have criticized that provision in the new disability directive. 

https://waiting.com/blog/2010/07/veterans-not-satisfied-with-new-regulation-on-ptsd-and-collecting-disability-benefits.html?preview=true&preview_id=734&preview_nonce=4b79cc5dc8

Veterans Not Satisfied With New Regulation On PTSD And Collecting Disability Benefits

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Posted on 13th July 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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The government’s new rule regarding disability benefits for veterans for post-traumatic stress disorder are an improvement but still don’t go far enough, according to veterans’ groups. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/13/us/13vets.html?scp=1&sq=veterans%20and%20mental%20health&st=cse

The new regulation says that veterans no longer have to document a specfice event, like a particular bomb blast, as the cause of them developing PTSD. Such evidence is often hard, if not impossible, to track down, according to The New York Times.

President Obama even referenced the new regulation on his radio show this weekend, saying, “I don’t think our troops on the battlefield should have to take notes to keep for a claims application.”

While veterans groups were happy about the change in the rule, they still voiced criticism about it. They are concerned about a clause that says the final say on whether a vet’s PTSD is a result of their military service can only be made by a doctor or psychologist that works for the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The veterans believe that private doctors should be allowed to make that determination, too. Such physicians have often been treating a vet and are familiary with his or her issues and background, the veterans groups argue.

The veterans affairs department argues that there will be more consistency in the exams if they are done by doctors working for the government, and that these physicians will be ablet to pick out “malingerers.”

Groups such as the National Organization of Veterans Advocates fear that government doctors will reject legitimate PTSD claims from veterans.

The veteran affairs department held a press conference on the new regulation regarding PTSD and disability payments on Monday. http://www1.va.gov/opa/pressrel/pressrelease.cfm?id=1922

Officials denied that government doctors would be less likely to find that a veteran’s PTSD was due to their military service.   

 

 

     

  

 

Government Ready To Change Disability Rules For Veterans With Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

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Posted on 9th July 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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In a change that could affect hundreds of thousands of veterans, the government is expected to soon issue new guidelins that would make it easier for those who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder to collect disability benefits, The New York Times reported Thursday. 

 http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/08/us/08vets.html?_r=1&hp

The new regulations from the Department of Veteran’s Affairs would put an end to the current rule that requires veterans to document events — like a mortar attack — that might have resulted in them suffering from PTSD.

These changes would finally give brave servicemen who have been in combat in Iraq, Afghanistan and Vietnam a break, and make it feasible for them to collect the disability payments they deserve. Finding documents to verify firefights and bombings takes a lot of time — if you can find them at all. 

And the way the rules are now, servicemen who suffer from PTSD but did not serve in combat, like women soldiers, are shut out of collecting disability. 

The Times reported that under the new guidelines, the veterans’ department will award compensation to veterans if they can “show that they were in a war zone and in a job consistent with the events that they say caused their conditions.”

Veterans would no longer have to prove that they had been under fire “or saw a friend die,” according to The Times. 

The new regulations would pave the way for more veterans to collect disability benefits, which include free medical and mental health care, and monthly payments up to $2,000.

There have been 150,000 cases of PTSD diagnosed among veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to The Times.     

Sports Writer Frank Deford Offers His Analysis Of Cincinnati Bengal Chris Henry’s Brain Damage

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Posted on 7th July 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Veteran sports writer Frank Deford takes up the story of Chris Henry, the deceased Cincinnati Bengal player who was found to have sustained brain damage, in a story for NPR Wednesday.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=128339775

Deford poses an interesting question: Are some athletes more susceptible to brain damage than others?

And he talks about efforts to find a way to determine if someone has a predisposition to brain damage.

I’ve written in-depth about the significance of Henry’s case, and Deford goes over it as well. Henry died several months ago after falling off the back of a pick-up truck. Apart from the injury from his fall, an autopsy determined that Henry  had CTE, chronic traumatic encephalopathy, which is essentially brain trauma.

Right now CTE can only be positively diagnosed by an autopsy, “in the brain tissue of cadavers,” as Deford puts it. So far 22 deceased ex-National Football League players have been found to have suffered from CTE,  he notes.

Henry’s case is a landmark because his death occurred while he was still in the prime of his career (had he not had all of the behavioral issues) and he never even sustained any documented concussions.

Deford writes about efforts to find a test that will detect CTE in the brains of the living. Lisa McHale, the widow of deceased NFL player Tom McHale, and McHale’s friend Jim Joyce are pushing for that.

McHale, suffering from depression and self-medicating with drugs, died of an overdose when he was just 45. His widow  Lisa blames his problems on brain damage he sustained while playing pro ball.

Joyce, himself an ex-player, is chairman of Aethlon Medical in San Diego. Joyce is doing research to determine if there are biomarkers that could be used to find those with a predisposition to CTE, according to Deford.

The question is asked could such a test convince parents to steer their kids away from sports like football and soccer if in fact they do have a predisposition to CTE.

The concern I have as I hear the chorus about CTE from more and more voices is that they seem to confuse the issue.  The issue is not whether there is an after death marker of brain injury, CTE, but whether there has been brain injury.  We can’t find a test for CTE because it is a particular thing that is only found on autopsy.  While we can’t find a litmus test for brain injury, experienced doctors can make the diagnosis with the proper consideration of all of the medical evidence, including the story of the life of the injured person.

Chris Henry’s life told such a story.  The tragedy is that no one ever listened to it in context that he was an athlete, playing a violent game.

 

 

Autopsy and Brain Damage – Soldiers Need To Be Part Of Brain Bank

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Posted on 2nd July 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

Autopsy is such a morbid concept, such a horrible invasion of privacy at a time when loved ones are dealing with the shock waves of grieving.  Yet, ironically it is the one good thing that can come out of death, especially the death of a young person.  The remarkable findings announced this week of former NFL player Chris Henry’s autopsy will contribute immeasurably to our understanding of brain injury and the risks of playing football.  Out of the tragedy of Chris Henry’s life and death, the lasting contribution he may make to our world is illuminating the connection between abnormal behavior and brain damage.

Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (MTBI) is one of the single most difficult things to diagnose and research in medicine. Its critical symptomotology, that momentary loss of consciousness or awareness, is almost never witnessed by the medical team.  The pathology is far too small to be seen on CT scan, and only in the most serious cases are conventional MRI’s showing clear cut evidence.  While it has a clear cut pattern of symptoms, other illnesses and conditions come with similar symptoms, making differentiating the condition harder.  This issue confounds the long thought gold standard for MTBI diagnosis, neuropsychology.  While in severe brain injury cases neuropsychology will demonstrate unequivocal patterns of  cognitive deficits, in MTBI or (Post Concussion Syndrome – PCS, a term used interchangeably) the deficits are subtle and could be dismissed as being caused by a myriad of other problems, including depression and poor motivation.  Adding to this problem is that depression and poor motivation are the symptoms of MTBI or PCS.  Further complicating the diagnostic puzzle is that those with premorbid histories of depression, anxiety, PTSD, or prior MTBI are far more likely to  be disabled by MTBI.  Finally, as many as half of the neuropsychologists practicing today are “non-believers” in PCS.

Now contrast an in vivo (during life) diagnosis of MTBI with an autopsy.  In autopsy there is no ambiguity.  The microscopic damage can be seen under a microscope.  The axonal tracts that may have been compromised, can be examined with the naked eye.  Actual residual blood stains can be seen on neural tissue.  The diagnosis can be made with a high certainty.  What value does it have to diagnose a non-life threatening condition after a person is already dead?  It moves the science of brain injury forward by leaps and bounds.  Were autopsy an integral part of mild traumatic brain injury research, the skeptics would have to play their sophistic (plausible but fallacious) games elsewhere.

But here is the problem with making autopsy a more integral part of MTBI research: Since MTBI is a non-fatal condition, it may be decades between the onset of the condition and the autopsy.  The movement to enlist NFL players to contribute their brains to a long term autopsy study is a true breakthrough, yet the research it will reveal will not become available for decades.  (As a side note, those autopsy’s done in the future generations, will be most illuminative if good records are kept of behavioral issues the players had after their careers ended and accurate records are kept of the concussions they suffered.)

Occasionally, medical science gets lucky on the misfortune of someone who dies young.  That is what happened with Chris Henry. This research was possible because someone with a documented MTBI, died seven months later from an unrelated cause.  Again, tragedy becomes fortuitous for medical science.  The autopsy revealed:

Gross inspection of the brain at autopsy was normal; however, microscopic analysis demonstrated what were considered trauma findings of hemosiderin-laden macrophages in the perivascular space and macrophages in the white matter, particularly the section taken from the frontal lobe.

All of the foregoing is important because this patient’s PCS was clearly documented.

The patient had partially returned to work at the time of death, but had encountered problems with diminished cognitive performance in his work as an appraiser. Neuropsychological studies were generally within normal limits although several tests of either speed of processing or short-term memory showed lower than expected performance. This case demonstrates the presence of subtle neuropathological changes in the brain of a patient who sustained a mild TBI and was still symptomatic for the residual effects of the injury 7 months post injury when he unexpectedly died.

As discussed above, neuropsychological testing showed issues, but nothing that a skeptic couldn’t dismiss as unrelated or feigned.  But you can’t fake the autopsy.

I have a narrow perspective on the neurosciences, devoting all of my time to representing those with traumatic brain injury. So take this with that bias in mind.

Nothing is more important to our medical science than to reach a greater understanding about the cause and nature of brain abnormalities, particularly those relating to trauma.

The U.S. government is now spending billions of dollars on TBI treatment for returning soldiers from Iraq and Afghanistan.  This hopefully will give us a tremendous data base to understand the nature of the forces, the acute period symptoms, the chronic problems that occur and neurobehavior abnormalities and disability that persist from TBI.  Some great data surveillance information could be available, with force sensors in helmets, pre-deployment and post-injury neuropsychological documentation, and long term treatment issues.  But as far as I can tell, there is one huge missing element in that focus: autopsy.

It would be a horrible invasion of privacy  and treading on the grieving process to make it autopsy mandatory, but all efforts and no expense should be spared to autopsy the brains of all American soldiers who die in combat.  This is imperative if the soldier suffered any head trauma or PTSD prior to death.  One of the wonders of autopsy is that it can sort out the chronic brain damage that existed prior to the fatal event from the brain damage which caused death, such as in Chris Henry’s case.

The fortuitous breakthrough from tragedy of a death from other causes with a documented prior TBI does not need to be a once in a generation opportunity.  Unfortunately, nearly every day an American soldier is being killed who had some previous MTBI.  Make those deaths mean something. Hundreds of such autopsies will advance our understanding not just about TBI in general.  Those autopsies could be of immeasurable value in treating other veterans who come home with TBI.

I give the NFL highest marks for its support of the give the brain to science program for its former players.  (A number of  ex-NFL players have agreed to donate their brains to the Boston School of Medicine, which is creating a bank of brains to examine as part of its research on head injury and future brain disease.) See http://www.tbilaw.com/blog/tag/nfl-and-brain-injury If veteran organizations, the VA, Congress or the Pentagon would show the same leadership, the dark cloud that shrouds the Post Concussion Syndrome could be lifted not in my lifetime, but in the next decade.  Let some good come out of war.