Index Investing News
Saturday, June 6, 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Home
  • World
  • Investing
  • Financial
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Crypto
  • Property
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Home
  • World
  • Investing
  • Financial
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Crypto
  • Property
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
Index Investing News
No Result
View All Result

An N.F.L. Doctor Wants to Know Why Some Players Get C.T.E. and Others Don’t

by Index Investing News
May 19, 2023
in Sport
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A
0
Home Sport
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


PITTSBURGH — Joseph Maroon, a neurosurgeon, began working for the Pittsburgh Steelers as a consulting doctor starting in 1977 and over 46 years has examined and treated stars from the notoriously hard-nosed dynasty, including the Hall of Famers Terry Bradshaw, Mean Joe Greene and Lynn Swann.

Many of them, he said, worry about the health of their brains because they played when concussions were viewed as “dings,” full-contact practices were common and the most violent hits were still permitted.

“Certainly, everyone who has participated at that level has some concern,” Maroon said last week in his office at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Presbyterian Hospital. “But we haven’t seen the epidemic that one might anticipate from playing in that era with less protective helmets, less rules and harder fields. There’s just so many unknowns.”

A growing number of scientific studies done over the past 15 years have found links between repeated head trauma and chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a degenerative brain disease. Many of those have come via the C.T.E. Center at Boston University, which has examined the brains of hundreds of former N.F.L. players and other athletes and military personnel.

But Maroon, who in the past has called the rates of C.T.E. in football players a “rare” phenomenon and “over-exaggerated,” felt there needed to be more research on why some athletes have few or none of the symptoms tied to C.T.E., including memory loss, impulse control issues and depression, while others are overwhelmed by them.

So five years ago, Maroon and the Steelers’ owner, Art Rooney II, approached doctors at the University of Pittsburgh’s Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center to discuss starting a sports-focused brain bank that studies the roles that age, genetics, substance abuse, the number of head hits and other factors play in the development of C.T.E.

The result is the National Sports Brain Bank at the University of Pittsburgh, which will formally open on Thursday. After being delayed several years by the Covid-19 pandemic, the center has accepted pledges of brains from athletes including the former Steelers running backs Jerome Bettis and Merril Hoge.

C.T.E. can be diagnosed only after death, and doctors are still years away from developing a test to detect the disease in the living, so posthumous donations to brain banks are still the primary method of advancing the research.

The center will also begin recruiting volunteers — athletes from all levels of sports, as well as nonathletes to serve as a control group — to provide their health histories and be monitored in the coming years. That information will be compared to the conditions of their brains after they die to determine which, if any, factors played a role in their having or not having C.T.E.

“We don’t know where the threshold is for C.T.E.,” said Julia Kofler, the director of the neuropathology department at the University of Pittsburgh, who will oversee the sports brain bank. “You certainly see cases that had very minimal pathology that had symptoms, and that’s the question. I think we really need to have as many cases as we can to answer these epidemiological questions.”

The National Sports Brain Bank will rely on the infrastructure at the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center, which already has more than 2,000 brains, though most are not from athletes. The Sports Brain Bank will use seed funding from the Chuck Noll Foundation, the Pittsburgh Foundation and the Richard King Mellon Foundation to find volunteers for the long-term study and people willing to pledge their brains.

Maroon, Kofler and others in Pittsburgh acknowledged the work of doctors at Boston University, who have been the undisputed leaders in C.T.E. research. Researchers there have more 1,350 brains not just from football players, but also from athletes who played hockey, rugby, soccer and other sports, as well as members of the military. So far, about 700 of those brains have been found to have C.T.E.

But Maroon said that some research produced by the Boston group was biased, because families had typically donated the brains of relatives who exhibited symptoms consistent with C.T.E. when they were alive. When asked to provide details of their loved ones’ head traumas, those families’ memories of the former players’ concussion histories might be imprecise.

The long-term study undertaken by researchers at Pittsburgh should “reduce, eliminate, obviate that kind of bias,” Maroon said.

Ann McKee, the neuropathologist who leads the C.T.E. Center at Boston University, said her group had for many years acknowledged the selection bias among families. She also said doctors at Boston University were already undertaking several longitudinal studies.

“We are doing all of this,” McKee said, adding that “it’s always great to have another group involved, and it’ll accelerate the research and accelerate scientific discoveries, especially concerning treatment. So that’s fantastic.”

Unlike Boston University, the National Sports Brain Bank is not shying away from ties to the N.F.L. The Chuck Noll Foundation for Brain Research, named for the former Steelers head coach who was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease before his death in 2014, has provided seed money to the bank. The foundation was started in 2016 partly with a donation from the Steelers’ charitable arm and has provided more than $2.5 million in research grants to explore the diagnosis and treatment of brain injuries, primarily those that occur in sports.

“It was important for the Steelers that we get behind this,” Rooney said in a phone interview. “Obviously, we’re in the early stages of this, but we’re hopeful that it gets the kind of attention that it’s going to need to really be successful.”

Hoge, the former Steelers running back who has agreed to donate his brain, said he had chosen the National Sports Brain Bank because the University of Pittsburgh and other institutions in the city had been centers of innovation in brain health, including the development of helmet technology. He also noted that Noll, his former coach, had pushed for the development of a test to evaluate a player’s cognitive abilities that could be used as a baseline to identify concussions. It was a forerunner to the Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Test (IMPACT) that has been used globally.

Hoge, who in 2018 co-wrote the book “Brainwashed: The Bad Science Behind C.T.E. and the Plot to Destroy Football,” added that he believed in the integrity of the research at the Pittsburgh brain bank.

“There’s so much misunderstanding and fear,” Hoge said. “Helping them find that right information and giving them other information and resources to help them with the thought process, I think, is very important.”

Gil Rabinovici, the director of the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at the University of California, San Francisco, said that “this type of research is best conducted when the funders and investigators are free of any potential conflicts,” referring to the Pittsburgh group’s N.F.L. links.

He added that the researchers in Boston had done an “excellent job” in describing the pathology of C.T.E., “but in science, you look for independent replication with different groups studying the same scientific questions using different methods, and hopefully reaching similar conclusions.”



Source link

Tags: CTEDoctorDontNFLplayers
ShareTweetShareShare
Previous Post

TipRanks names the top 10 financial sector analysts of past decade

Next Post

MTG’s Reply to Unindicted Coup Plotter Adam Schiff’s Feeble Defense Is Pure Fire

Related Posts

Line-ups confirmed for World Cup warm-up

Line-ups confirmed for World Cup warm-up

by Index Investing News
June 4, 2026
0

With one week to go until the World Cup, Spain face Iraq in their latest warm-up match as preparations for...

Mets option Jonah Tong to Triple-A Syracuse

Mets option Jonah Tong to Triple-A Syracuse

by Index Investing News
June 3, 2026
0

Jun 2, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; New York Mets relief pitcher Jonah Tong (21) pitches to the Seattle Mariners during...

3 Feuds for Finn Balor on WWE SmackDown 

3 Feuds for Finn Balor on WWE SmackDown 

by Index Investing News
June 2, 2026
0

The WWE landscape changed dramatically following Clash in Italy, as Finn Balor was officially moved from RAW to SmackDown. After...

Katie McCabe signs for Chelsea: Republic of Ireland captain to swap Arsenal for WSL rivals | Football News

Katie McCabe signs for Chelsea: Republic of Ireland captain to swap Arsenal for WSL rivals | Football News

by Index Investing News
June 1, 2026
0

Chelsea are set to sign Republic of Ireland captain Katie McCabe when her Arsenal contract expires on July 1.The 30-year-old...

Soccer Aid LIVE: Damson Idris scores for England against World XI after Owen Cooper escapes conceding penalty

Soccer Aid LIVE: Damson Idris scores for England against World XI after Owen Cooper escapes conceding penalty

by Index Investing News
May 31, 2026
0

England 1-0 World XI40 mins: What a save from the 55-year-old Edwin van der Sar to deny Wayne Rooney! Rooney...

Next Post
MTG’s Reply to Unindicted Coup Plotter Adam Schiff’s Feeble Defense Is Pure Fire

MTG’s Reply to Unindicted Coup Plotter Adam Schiff’s Feeble Defense Is Pure Fire

In Hiroshima, Biden promises Japan nuclear umbrella — RT World News

In Hiroshima, Biden promises Japan nuclear umbrella — RT World News

RECOMMENDED

Investing in Commercial Real Estate for Beginners

Investing in Commercial Real Estate for Beginners

January 27, 2024
Metro to serve Jerusalem inhabitants of 1.8m by 2050

Metro to serve Jerusalem inhabitants of 1.8m by 2050

November 5, 2024
Compass Appoints New Head Of Investor Relations

Compass Appoints New Head Of Investor Relations

October 10, 2024
Federal Reserve warns of growing geopolitical risks to global financial system

Federal Reserve warns of growing geopolitical risks to global financial system

October 21, 2023
Analyst Says Dogecoin Is But To Full fifth Wave, Right here’s How Excessive It Should Go

Analyst Says Dogecoin Is But To Full fifth Wave, Right here’s How Excessive It Should Go

February 1, 2025
SEC Sues Binance, Coinbase Then BlackRock Files For Bitcoin Spot ETF; Is This An Inside Job?

SEC Sues Binance, Coinbase Then BlackRock Files For Bitcoin Spot ETF; Is This An Inside Job?

June 21, 2023
Disrespect for nation’s warfare lifeless disqualifying for presidential hopeful

Disrespect for nation’s warfare lifeless disqualifying for presidential hopeful

August 30, 2024
Do You NEED an LLC for Rental Property?

Do You NEED an LLC for Rental Property?

December 31, 2022
Index Investing News

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of Investing, World News, Stocks, Market Analysis, Business & Financial News, and more from the top trusted sources.

  • 1717575246.7
  • Browse the latest news about investing and more
  • Contact us
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • xtw18387b488

Copyright © 2022 - Index Investing News.
Index Investing News is not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • Investing
  • Financial
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Crypto
  • Property
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion

Copyright © 2022 - Index Investing News.
Index Investing News is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In