New York High School Football Player Dies After Sustaining Brain Injury At A Game

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Posted on 15th October 2011 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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New York passed a law this summer to help guard student athletes from the repercussions of concussions. But that law can’t prevent young football players from being fatally hurt on the field.  

Such was the case with a varsity football player in Upstate New York who died of a head injury he sustained while playing on Friday. The 16-year-old lineman’s name was Ridge Barden, according to the Associated Press, and his death has apparently shocked his hometown. 

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/15/high-school-football-player-dies-head-injury_n_1012366.html?icid=maing-grid7%7Cmain5%7Cdl1%7Csec1_lnk2%7C104716

Barden, who played for John C. Birdlebough High School in Phoenix, N.Y., was hit during a play at an away game Friday at Homer, which is near Syracuse. He landed face down on the field, but then did sit up. Barden said he had a severe headache, AP reported.

But when Barden tried to get up, he fell back down.  At first Barden was brought to a local hospital by ambulance, according to AP, and he was being moved to a medical center in Syracuse when his condition grew worse. The ambulance did turn around, but Barden died. 

Recently there has been plenty of discussion about the safety, or lack of safety, of football helmets, especially for student football players. The Phoenix school district does send out its football helmets each year to be recondtioned, AP reported.

Barden’s death will be investigated by local police, but what will they find? An autopsy should be conducted to determine the precise cause of his demise. 

Perhaps that will offer some insight that can help save a young life in the future.      

Former NHL Star Martin Had Brain Disease Linked To Repeated Head Trauma

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Posted on 6th October 2011 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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A disturbing pattern has emerged, and is now being scientifically proven, regarding brain disease and the deaths of pro hockey players. 

Earlier this week researchers at the Boston University Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy (CSTE) announced that former National Hockey League star Rick Martin was suffering from Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE), a neurodegenerative disease linked to repeated brain trauma, when he died at age 59 of a heart attack last March.

http://www.bu.edu/cste/news/press-releases/october-5-2011/

All three former NHL players  to have their brains studied post-mortem at the center have now been shown to be suffering from CTE, but Martin is the first who did not play an “enforcer” role and regularly participate in on-ice fights, according to the press release put out by the CSTE.

Martin was diagnosed with CTE by neuropathologist and CSTE co-director Dr. Ann McKee, the director of the largest CTE “brain bank” in the world, located at the Bedford VA Medical Center. CTE can only be diagnosed by examining brain tissue post-mortem.

Previously McKee had diagnosed former NHL players Bob Probert and Reggie Fleming with CTE. Probert died at the age of 45 from heart disease. Fleming, who died in 2009 at the age of 73 with dementia, displayed 30 years of worsening behavioral and cognitive difficulties.

Do you see a pattern here?

Martin was a seven-time All-Star in 13 seasons in the NHL, nearly all with the Buffalo Sabres before finishing his career with the Los Angeles Kings, scoring 382 goals and 701 total points as a left wing. 

Martin had stage 2 of 4 (with 4 being the most severe) of the disease, a stage unlikely to significantly affect his cognitive abilities or behavior. What’s disturbing is that Martin would not appear to be a likely candidate for CTE.  

He did not suffer known brain trauma outside of hockey, did not engage in fighting, and his only known concussion occurred in a game in 1977 when his head hit the ice while not wearing a helmet, causing immediate convulsions, according to the CSTE press release. Martin only wore a helmet for the four years he played after that injury.

“Rick Martin’s case shows us that even hockey players who don’t engage in fighting are at risk for CTE, likely because of the repetitive brain trauma players receive throughout their career,” said CSTE Co-Director Chris Nowinski. “We hope the decision makers at all levels of hockey consider this finding as they continue to make adjustments to hockey to make the game safer for participants.”

The New York Times wrote a story Thursday on the CSTE’s announcement, and the press release included a prepared statement by Dr. Robert Cantu, a leading concussion expert and a CSTE co-director.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/06/sports/hockey/rick-martin-had-disease-related-to-brain-trauma.html?_r=1&ref=hockey

“It is scientifically interesting that Mr. Martin only had stage 2 disease at 59 years old, as by that age most cases in our brain bank have advanced to stage 3 or 4,” Cantu said. “There are a number of variables that we don’t yet understand that could account for this finding, such as lower lifetime exposure to brain trauma, later onset of the disease, genetic risk factors, among others.”

Robert Stern, a CSTE co-director, also had a statement.

““We believe that repetitive brain trauma is a necessary factor for developing the disease, but not a sufficient factor,” Stern said. ” We now must learn why some people get the disease and others don’t and why CTE progresses more quickly and severely in some individuals than in others.”

The VA CSTE Brain Bank contains more brains diagnosed with CTE than have ever been reported in the world combined, according to Wednesday’s press release.  There are 96 specimens, including the brain of NHL player Derek Boogaard, who died earlier this year at 28 years old.  Results from that case are pending.

McKee has completed the analysis of the brains of over 70 former athletes, and more than 50 have shown signs of CTE, including 14 of 15 former NFL players, as well as college and high school football players, hockey players, professional wrestlers and boxers. More than 500 living athletes have committed to donate their brain to the BU CSTE after death, including over a dozen former hockey players.

The details of Martin’s brain tissue analysis are embargoed pending submission to an academic medical journal.

However the Martin family requested that the diagnosis be made public at this time, believing that Rick Martin would have wanted to raise awareness of the dangers of brain trauma in sports and encourage greater efforts to make sports safer for the brain, according to the press release. The Martin family is not ready to make any other comments at this time.

The CSTE was founded in 2008 and is the leading center in the world studying the long-term effects of repetitive brain trauma in sports and the military. The CSTE was created as a collaboration between BU, Sports Legacy Institute (SLI) and the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).

 Co-directors of the BU CSTE include Cantu, clinical professor of neurosurgery at BUSM; McKee, professor of neurology and pathology at BUSM and director of the VA CSTE Brain Bank at VA;  Nowinski; and Stern,  professor of neurology and neurosurgery at BUSM.

The mission of the CSTE is to conduct state-of-the-art research of CTE, including its neuropathology and pathogenesis, the clinical presentation, biomarkers, clinical course, the genetics and other risk factors for CTE, and ways of preventing and treating this cause of dementia.

The BU CSTE has received grants from the National Institutes of Health and the National Operating Committee on Standards in Athletic Equipment (NOCSAE), and has received an unrestricted gift from the NFL.

CSTE co-directors Cantu, McKee, Stern and Nowinski serve on the NFL Players Association Mackey/White Traumatic Brain Injury Committee, which includes, and is chaired by, CSTE registry member Sean Morey.  In addition, Cantu serves as a senior advisor to the NFL Head, Neck and Spine Committee.

 

California High School Football Player Seeks A Win Against Brain Cancer

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Posted on 2nd October 2011 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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One’s mental outlook can mean the difference between victory or defeat in sports and war, as well as brain injury. That’s the lesson to be learned from Austin Munoz, a teenaged California high school football player.  

The story of Munoz, who has been diagnosed with two malignant brain tumors, was skillfully told a week ago by the Ventura County Star.

http://www.vcstar.com/news/2011/sep/24/moorparks-munozs-uses-healthy-mentality-to-fight/

Munoz, 16, who played for Moorpark High School, was diagnosed this summer. He began feeling very fatigued, and one day had a seizure. A CT scan revealed that he had two maligant germ cell tumors, with one inside his pituitary gland another larger between the third and fourth ventricle of his brain.

Munoz has remained upbeat during his treatments and has been on the sidelines rooting for his team. Tests show that his small tumor is gone and the other has become 60 percent smaller. His right arm and leg, which had been affected by the seizure, have become more functional, according to the Ventura County Star.

And his positive attitude hasn’t waivered.      

TBI, PTSD Become Defenses For Veterans Facing Criminal Charges

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Posted on 24th September 2011 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Veterans of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are increasingly using post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and brain injury as a defense in criminal trials. And that strategy has prompted a debate in legal circles, as to whether that defense is legitimate, or an insult to vets who weather PTSD and brain injury without committing criminal acts.

There are two recent cases where the PTSD defense has been used and drawn media attention. In one of the cases, Joshua Stepp, 28, a former Army soldier who was in combat in Iraq, was charged with first-degree murder in the death of his 10-month-old stepdaughter in North Carolina. The Los Angeles Times wrote about the case in detail earlier this month.  

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-ptsd-20110915,0,5747778,full.story

The charges were gruesome. Stepp was accused of banging his infant stepdaughter’s head on a carpeted floor, putting toilet paper down her throat and sexually molesting her in November 2009. 

Stepp’s defense attorney argued that because of PTSD, Stepp could not have premeditated the killing, as is required in first-degree murder, which potentially carries the death penalty, according to The Times. The lawyer asked the jury to convict Stepp of second-degree murder, which is not a capital-punishment crime.

Stepp testified that he didn’t remember much about  the night of the killing, and that the slaying  “just like happened.” Stepp also talked about his duty in Iraq, which included seeing his fellow soldiers being blown up and once having to put body parts in a pizza box.     

The PTSD defense didn’t work. On Sept. 8 a jury convicted Stepp of first-degree murder and sexual assault. But the panel deadlocked on whether to impose the death penalty, and the judge sent Stepp to prison for life with no parole.

The second PTSD-defense case is in Tampa, Fla., where ex-Marine captain Scott Sciple  is charged with DUI manslaughter, according to the Associated Press. In April 2010 Sciple was driving down an interstate the wrong way when he hit another car head-on and killed its driver. He is awaiting trial on the charges.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/marine-claims-brain-trauma-led-fatal-dui-crash-14592033

Sciple had a hero’s background, receiving three Purple Hearts and a Bronze Star in Afghanistan and Iraq. But in combat he was physically and mentally wounded, his lawyers contended. Sciple had sustained traumatic brain injury and once almost died from blood loss.   

Sciple’s lawyer is mounting an insanity defense, arguing that because of his TBI and PTSD, Stiple blacked out the night of the fatal accident.  

According to AP, the wife of the victim, Pedro Rivera, is holding the military at least partially to blame for her husband’s death, maintaining that it should have given Sciple help for his PTSD. And as AP noted, “remarkably,” in a 860-page report on the case the Marine Corps agreed that veterans need more help.

In a letter regarding that investigation, AP reported, one Marine investigator wrote, “It is folly to expect a wounded mind to diagnose itself, yet our Marines still depend on an anemic system of self-diagnosis and self-reporting.”

The Los Angeles Times, based on Joshua Stepp’s trial, wrote an editorial Thurday headlined “Perils  of the PTSD Defense.” In a nutshell, The Times came down on this defense.

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/opinionla/la-ed-ptsd-20110923,0,5722414.story

“Like other defendants, veterans deserve to have mitigating factors taken into account by the criminal justice system,” the newspaper wrote. “But there is the danger that post-traumatic stress disorder will become a talisman for leniency where none is justified — and a synonym for criminal tendencies. That would be unfair to other defendants and demeaning to the military.”

I’d agree that TBI and PTSD shouldn’t be used with reckless abandon as a defense. They both can have a devastatingly negative impact on behavior, and that fact should never be dismissed or downplayed, especially when talking about combat vets.  Each criminal act has to be looked at on a case-by-case basis. But the impact of TBI and PTSD should never be underestimated.        

Rangers Richards Champions NHL Rule Changes That Will Reduce Concussions

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Posted on 16th September 2011 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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It looks like the call for toughter rules to protect NHL players against concussions has gotten a new champion: The New York Rangers new team member Brad Richards.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/16/sports/hockey/rangers-richards-joins-growing-call-for-safer-hockey.html?_r=1&ref=todayspaper

On Friday The New York Times, in a story headlined “New Rangers Center Joins Growing Call For Safer Hockey,” said that Richards appears ready to step forward and push action on the head-injury safety issue. It is a matter that has weighed heavily on the league this year.

Richards, who at $12  million a year is the NHL’s highest paid player, told The Times that the game could do with a ban on hits to the head. He also believes that American hockey can do without the fights that are the highlight of the game for some fans. Hits to the head are already barred in U.S. college and international hockey, according to The Times.

The repeated head injuries that so-called “enforcers” sustain have fueled speculation about a link between those concussions and the deaths of three NHL players earlier this year. Two of them took their own lives. 

“Every locker room now is talking about head shots and concussions,” Richards told The Times.

The NHL last year agreed to ban most hits to the head, “but kept legal those resulting from straight-on contact,” according to The Times. But even with that stricter rule, players are still sustaining brain injury. In January Sidney Crosby of the Penguins suffered a concussion that kept him sidelined.

Although it’s not Richards’ role to fight during a game, he is in favor of banning fighting to protect NHL enforcers. The 31-year-old has been involved in four fights and had two concussions in his career.          

It looks like he will be an eloquent spokesman for some sanity from the NHL on brain injury.

Test Halted After Stents Fail To Prevent Strokes

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Posted on 10th September 2011 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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In a disappointing development, this week it was disclosed that a stent that was being inserted in the brain to prevent strokes was a failure, with patients who had it installed actually suffering more strokes than those without it, according to The New York Times.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/08/health/research/08stent.html?src=me&ref=general

A study of the stents, which were conditionally approved by the Food and Drug Administration six years ago, was halted because of the findings. The results of the study were published last week online by The New England Journal of Medicine.

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1105335?query=featured_home

The brain stents worked the way that stents in the heart do. Heart stents are inserted to keep blocked arteries open, therefore preventing heart attacks. The brain stents were inserted in blocked arteries in the brain in order to prevent  fatal or disabling strokes.

But the study of the use of stents in the brain found that the device “doubled the rate of stroke or death,” according to The Times.

The FDA had only approved the stents for “on the basis of a humanitarian exemption,”  namely “high risk patients who failed medical management,” The Times reported. And thousands of people have had stents installed in their brains since then.

The stent in question was produced by Boston Scientific, and was very similar to stents used in blood vessels leading to the heart. It was also very expensive, costing $21,000 for the device and its insertion.

Enrollment in the test was stopped because the 30-day rate of stroke or death was 14.7 percent in the group with the stents, more than twice as high as the rate in the medical-management group, which was only 5.8 precent, according to The New England Journal of Medicine.

Those risk factors led to the plug being pulled on the study.

 

 

 

  

Do Field Hockey Goggles Protect Eyes, But Result In Concussions?

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Posted on 7th September 2011 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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It would seen like a no-brainer, pun intended, that field hockey players should wear goggles to prevent injuries. But actually, whether goggles work as a safety measure is the topic of debate. Some believe that goggles can lead to concussions.

The Star-Ledger of Newark published a story Wednesday about the impact of a national safety rule that now mandates that field hockey players wear eye protection while on the field. “When It Comes To Goggles, Field Hockey Experts Don’t See Eye To Eye” was the headline.

http://www.nj.com/hssports/blog/fieldhockey/index.ssf/2011/09/field_hockey_coaches_players_are_torn_over_goggles_rule.html

The first paragraph of the story is about woman who has played field hockey for at least two decades, and says that she has never seen an injury that would have been avoided if the player had been wearing goggles. And according to The Ledger, many veteran coaches in New Jersey are taking issue with the goggle requirement, which was instituted by the National Federation of State High School Associations. 

What the beef with goggles?

Not only coaches, but USA Field Hockey has voiced its objection to the mandatory goggle rule. It contends that more concussions take place when players wear goggles. The contention is that if a ball or stick hits the goggles, this hard plastic safety gear itself will injure a player’s head and brain.

USA Field Hockey told the The Ledger that it is doing research on goggles and concussions, and hopefully that will shed light on the matter. In the interim, this season 62,000 high school field hockey players in America will be wearing the goggles, according to The Ledger.  

 

 

With Three Players Dead, NHL Needs To Study The Impact Fighting Has On ‘Enforcers’

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Posted on 5th September 2011 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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On Aug. 31 I wrote a blog about the death of a Winnipeg Jets hockey pl;ayer, with the headline “Rick Rypien’s Death Should Be A Wake-Up Call To The NHL.”

 https://waiting.com/blog/2011/08/rick-rypiens-death-should-be-a-wake-up-call-to-the-nhl.html

Well, now you can add another co-called “enforcer” to the list of young hockey players, athletes who essentially made their living throwing fists, that have been found dead since this spring. Coincidence? I don’t believe in such coincidences.

Last Wednesday Wade Belak, 35, was found dead in a condo in Toronto. The Associated Press reported that it was a suicide.

Earlier this year, on May 13, Derek Boogaard, 28, was discovered dead in his apartment in Minneapolis. And on Aug. 15, Rypien, 27, was found dead in his apartment in Alberta. News reports labeled it a suicide.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/02/sports/hockey/deaths-of-three-nhl-players-raises-a-deadly-riddle.html?_r=1&ref=hockey

Last week The New York Times took a look at this trio of deaths in a story headlined “A Deadly Riddle.”  That story noted that Belak alone was involved in 125 fights during his career with the National Hockey League.

In pro hockey, enforcers such as Belak and Boogaard, who was reportedly one of the most feared of his kind in the league, “go to war every day,” as sports agent Scott Norton told The Times. Enforcers are designated warriors, expected to intimidate opposing teams, and physically lay hands on rivals who take cheap shots at team mates.

Obviously that violent role takes a toll emotionally, as well as physically, on even the brawniest, toughest men.

Case in point: One former enforcer, Brannt Myhres, recalled being “curled up in a ball in a hotel room, scared to death for the next fight,” according to The Times.

So the question is to what extent, if any, serving as hockey enforcers contributed or lead to the deaths of Boogaard, Rypien and Belak. Some say it’s not a cut-and-dried issue.

The Times noted that while all three men were enforcers they were very different, as were the circumstances of their deaths. Boogaard, who sustained at least 12 concussions during his career, died of an accidental overdose of painkillers and alcohol.   

His family, suspecting that Boogaard may have been suffering from the same brain disease as a number of pro football players, sent his brain to Boston University for testing. A research center at that school has already determined that nearly two dozen former NFL players had a brain disease, a condition called chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE),  that’s been linked to concussions they suffered while on the field.

The results for Boogaard aren’t out yet, but BU has already found evidence of CTE in the brains of two retired NHL players.

Rypien had a history of depression. Belak was married and the dad of two daughters, and didn’t appear to have a history of problems.

The NHL needs to commission scientific research, and take a hard look at enforcers and the physical and mental impact that role has on them. Then the league needs to find ways to save the lives of these young men.

 

 

Rick Rypien’s Death Should Be A Wake-Up Call To The NHL

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Posted on 21st August 2011 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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The National Hockey League needs to take a good hard look at why two of its players, known for fighting often and hard,  have ended up dead this year.

Earlier this month Winnipeg Jets forward Rick Rypien, 27, was found dead in his home in Coleman, Alberta, Canada. He had suffered from bouts of depression for some time, and that ailment forced him to take two leaves of absence when he played for the Vancouver Canucks, as The New York Times pointed out. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/17/sports/hockey/rypiens-death-follows-bouts-of-depression.html?_r=1&scp=2&sq=rick%20rypien&st=cse

A feisty fighter despite his relatively small size, 5-feet-11 and 190 pounds, Rypien had failed to show up for a physical for the Jets. His death was described as “sudden” but “not suspicious” by police.

Rypien’s death wasn’t the only shocking NHL fatality this year. In May, Rangers forward Derek Boogaard was found dead in his Minneapolis apartment. He was killed by an accidental overdose of oxycodone and alcohol. The 28-year-old had an addiction problem.

Both players were fighters. Boogaard was an enforcer who deliverd a lot of shots to the heads of his opponents, and he got hit in the head in return. Rypien wasn’t intimidated by bigger players: He took them on in fights on the ice.  

Now both are dead, with Rypien the latest tragedy.

“Comparisons to Boogaard are uncomfortable and unavoidable,” The Montreal Gazette wrote. “Both players, who routinely absorbed blows to the head in the line of duty, are gone prematurely after encountering serious off-ice issues.”

 http://www.montrealgazette.com/sports/Rypien+death+should+raise+flags/5264217/story.html

At a press conference, the president of the organization Rypien once played for, the Western Hockey League, raised some of the hard questions that these two deaths present.

In the case of Rypien, the Gazette quoted Brent Parker as saying, “There’s no question he took some blows. Whether that was a direct (contributor) to his problems, I guess that’s for medical people to determine. I couldn’t even answer that, but it’s certainly something that I’ve questioned and asked over the last 24 hours, and I don’t think there’s any way you can’t.”     

Brain injuries, blows to the head, can lead to depression.

Pro hockey needs to step back and find a way to help players address the stress, mental and physical, of the game. It may need to change some of the rules to help players. But the process needs to start before another young player dies.

New York Radio Vet Rick Buckley Dies Of Brain Embolism

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Posted on 14th August 2011 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Veteran New York City radio broadcaster Rick Buckley, who was president of  WOR, died earlier this month of  a brain embolism. He was in his mid-70s.  

http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/2011/07/31/2011-07-31_rick_buckley_president_of_wor_radio_dies_after_suffering_brain_embolism.html

Buckley, who was inducted into the New York Radio Hall of Fame about a month before he died, was considered a legend in the radio industry. He was a staunch advocate of local radio in a world of media consolidation, where large corporations were swallowing up local radio statios.

Buckley passed away after feeling sick while on the Long Island Sound in a boat, not far from his home in Quogue.

Buckley took over his dad’s company, WOR’s parent Buckley Broadcasting, in 1972, according to an obituary in the New York Daily News.

He had many offers to sell his WOR radio station, but hung on to the outlet instead.