• Football helmet grants
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  • Ex-teammate: Seau suffered 1,500 concussions; donates brain
  • Former NFL player Coy Wire on concussions: create a new norm
  • CTE and Alzheimer's; different diseases
  • Junior Seau's former agent reflects on his death
  • NFL draft highlights concussion issues
  • Brain wiring a no-brainer? (video)

Dr. Sanjay Gupta's "Big Hits, Broken Dreams" (video preview)

 Note:  "Big Hits, Broken Dreams" will be re-broadcast on February 25th at 8pm, 11pm, and 2am EST on CNN.

As a father of three, neurosurgeon and journalist, a big interest of mine has been the concussion crisis in sports. I’ve been investigating it for two years now and on Sunday, January 29th at 8:00pm EST, CNN will air my latest documentary “Big Hits, Broken Dreams.

 
The numbers are startling. Each year, over four million kids are playing football and endangering their brains every time they go head to head.  A growing body of evidence suggests that kind of constant trauma is particularly dangerous for youth football players, whose brains are still developing. For some kids, that means long-term memory problems, depression and even early death.

 
One story I will never forget involves a young football player from Greenville, North Carolina. In 2008, junior Jaquan Waller received a concussion in practice and went back to play two days later. That Friday night, he was hit again during a game. He suffered a brain hemorrhage and died from second-impact syndrome – defined as when a player returns to play before his concussion has healed. For JH Rose High School, the four time state champions, it was the first time a player had died under their watch – and experts agree that it could have been prevented.
 
 
In “Big Hits, Broken Dreams,” we follow the Rampants of JH Rose starting in pre-season practice through their quest for another state championship. Along the way, we will examine the safety measures enacted since Waller’s death, including mandated athletic trainers on the field, baseline neurological testing, and changing the entire way they practice and play football. There are lessons I learned that I will share with you, and could make all of our kids safer.
 
The question is – can these players be safer than ever, and also still win -- while still preserving the game America loves?

 
I hope you, your families, friends and colleagues will tune in on January 29th to watch the documentary and demand a national conversation seeking solutions to keep our kids safe and concussion free.

 
Respectfully,
Sanjay Gupta, M.D.
Chief Medical Correspondent, CNN

 
 

Health

Study: some have more symptoms and they last longer

EAST LANSING, Mich. — New research out of Michigan State University reveals female athletes and younger athletes take longer to recover from concussions, findings that call for physicians and ...

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Neuroscience

Study takes closer look at athletes with CTE

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Postmortem analysis of the brains of ten professional athletes with chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) provides new insights into the ...

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Resources

CDC: Return-to-school guide for school ...
  • School professionals play an important role in the health of all students.  Recognizing the signs and symptoms of concussion is important, as is managing their return to school post-injury.
  • Some ...
read more...

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