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iBaseline
  • Pop Warner limits contact practices
  • Why concussions affect people differently
  • First soccer head impact study
  • Video games used to assess concussions
  • Univ. of Georgia concussion symposium May 30 at 8pm
  • Riddell adds CDC/USA Football  concussion tags
  • Brain injury's 911 call
  • First responders: concussions no easy task
  • Sub-concussive impacts may affect learning
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iBaselineTM a division of SportsConcussions.org, is a complementary service designed to help develop concussion management plans for school districts, leagues, and teams involved in every sport.

Our experts work with you to determine which resources are appropriate for your situation, your goals, and your budget.

Your plan may include sideline concussion management, balance testing, computerized neuropsychological (baseline) testing, speakers for your organization, handouts, and more. We'll show you how.

Let us help you educate your organization including your coaches, parents, athletes.

Contact us today, our program is offered as a public service.

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If we're offering baseline testing in your area:

Computer baseline testing: We offer computerized neuropsychological (baseline) testing from a variety of companies. If you are attending one of our testing sessions in your community, contact us for dates, times, and permission slips. All paperwork is also available at the testing site. Please RSVP (so you don't have to wait) as computer availablilty varies at each location.

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Current research

Concussion research has increased dramatically over the past several years, particularly at the youth level. However, studies take time. Much of the data that's been accumulated so far applies to adults and does not extrapolate directly to youth athletes. Therefore, it is important to remember that adult remedies may not be suitable for student-athletes. For instance, tests performed on adult helmets, with adult-sized forces and dimensions, do not apply to youth helmets. Human brains are not fully developed until around age 25.

New hockey helmet tackles rotational forces

OTTAWA, Ontario--Bauer Hockey, Inc., the world’s leading manufacturer of ice hockey equipment, officially unveiled the BAUER RE-AKT helmet, the first hockey helmet designed to specifically manage the multiple type of hits in the game, including rotational-force impacts,...

Concussions more harmful to teens: study

The revolving door of concussed professional athletes has changed over time. A play resulting in having one's "bell rung" used to mean a headache for a few days but no missed plays. Then injured players would return within a week. Today, it is more common to see...

Concussions more harmful to teens: study (2)

The revolving door of concussed professional athletes has changed over time. A play resulting in having one's "bell rung" used to mean a headache for a few days but no missed plays. Then injured players would return within a week. Today, it is more common to see...

Heading in Soccer; the investigation continues

Could heading the ball in soccer lead to degenerative brain disease, like that seen in athletes in other sports? That's the question addressed by a review in the January issue of Neurosurgery, official journal of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons. As yet there's not...

Portable brain scanner wins FDA approval

On those rare occasions when an athlete becomes unresponsive, the clock starts ticking. The decision to airlift to a trauma center or transport to the local hospital can mean the difference between life and death. In the case of brain injuries, medical personnel make...

Amino acids may restore concussion's chemical imbalance

Concussions are often called the "invisible" injury because they are usually not detectable by the average CT scan or MRI. Even so, it is often very apparent that something is wrong. That "something" is often defined as a metabolic imbalance, created by the impact of...

Amino acids may restore concussion's chemical imbalance

Concussions are often called the "invisible" injury because they are usually not detectable by the average CT scan or MRI. Even so, it is often very apparent that something is wrong. That "something" is often defined as a metabolic imbalance, created by the impact of...

NHL enforcer Boogaard the "Boogeyman" had CTE at 28

Family, friends, and teammates watched Derek Boogaard's descent to death, in slow motion. When his body was discovered in his Minneapolis apartment on May 13, 2011, his NHL career and his life had been punctuated by substance abuse, stints in rehabilitation centers,...

Study: Concussion Testing Should Not Overlook Physiology

ACSM research finds impaired cerebrovascular reactivity among concussed athletes / With the ice hockey and football seasons now in full swing, kinesiology experts are examining the prolonged effects of concussions on athletes. While many athletes think they are recovered...

Soccer 'Heading' Can Lead to Brain Injury

Nov. 30, 2011 - Using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) to study the effects of soccer 'heading,' researchers have found that players who head the ball with high frequency have brain abnormalities similar to those found in traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients. Results...

NOCSAE statement on leatherhead study

NOCSAE® Statement from the National Operating Committee on Standards for Athletic Equipment "The National Operating Committee on Standards for Athletic Equipment (NOCSAE) believes scientific research is very important in helping to understand how best to protect...

Routine Head Hits in Sports May Cause Brain Injury

Nov. 18, 2011 -- The brain scans of high school football and hockey players showed subtle injury -- even if they did not suffer a concussion – after taking routine hits to the head during the normal course of play, according to a University of Rochester Medical Center...

Leather vs. Poly; helmet study surprise

Old-fashioned "leatherhead" football helmets from the early 1900s are often as effective as – and sometimes better than – modern football helmets at protecting against injuries during routine, game-like collisions, according to Cleveland Clinic researchers. The study...

Study investigates blood biomarkers for concussion

Researchers at Cleveland Clinic have received a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to continue studying the effectiveness of a blood test that conclusively identifies concussions in college football players. The test – using blood samples taken before and...

Forces that Fracture

ANN ARBOR, Mich.—While studying concussions in a high school football team, researchers captured the impact of an 18-year-old player who broke his neck during a head-down tackle in real-time. Steven Broglio, an assistant professor in the University of Michigan School of...

CTE or not, these athletes suffered

Autopsy results from four former Canadian Football League (CFL) players showed the presence of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) in two of the mens' brains. CTE is a degenerative brain disease studied extensively by Boston area researchers at the Center for the...

Researchers' Helmet Ratings Impact Buying Decisions - Buyer Beware

Researchers at Virginia Tech recently released the results of an eight-year study that culminated in an announcement specifically detailing which adult football helmets performed best in reducing concussion risk. Results are part of the Virginia Tech National Impact...

Brain Health

CT scans may increase brain cancer risk

Children and young adults scanned multiple times by computed tomography (CT), a commonly used diagnostic tool, have a small increased risk of leukemia and brain tumors in the decade following their ...

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Neuroscience

911 signal relay sends help to brain injury

Like emergency workers rushing to a disaster scene, cells called microglia speed to places where the brain has been injured, to contain the damage by ‘eating up’ any cellular debris and dead or dying ...

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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 ...
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