Lethbridge Herald

CFL alumni team up with brain exercise company

Tom Brady also uses program

- Dan Ralph THE CANADIAN PRESS

When Bob Bronk began experienci­ng brief memory lapses six years ago, he wondered if they were due to getting older or the concussion­s he suffered playing football.

The former Toronto Argonauts running back figures he was “knocked out cold three or four times” in games and there were other occasions “when I had a concussion.” The 58-year-old Winnipeg native, a member of the Argos’ 1983 Grey Cup-winning team, recollects first being concussed at age 15.

“It was like the cartoon when you see stars flying around,” said Bronk, the CEO of the Ontario Constructi­on Secretaria­t. “I was fortunate, though, when I had concussion­s or was knocked out I didn’t have any headaches or dizziness. I don’t even remember having to take an aspirin.

“I always prided myself on being mentally sharp but I remember having to fix something in the bathroom and going to the basement to get a tool and after getting there wondering, ‘What tool did I come here for?’ Thankfully there’s no evidence of any post-concussion symptoms whatsoever . . . but I’m still working full-time and would like to for a long time. You want to stay mentally sharp just for the sake of being mentally sharp.”

So Bronk joined The Canadian Sports Concussion Project at Toronto Western Hospital with other former CFL players. That’s when Bronk used BrainHQ, an online brain exercise and assessment program, for 30 minutes four times weekly over three years.

“Last year when they did the analysis my scores actually improved, which is unusual,” said Bronk, who recently resumed using the program. “But I totally attribute that to doing BrainHQ.

“It’s like your body, you’ve got to do cardio and strength training but you’ve also got to exercise your brain. I know it’s made a big difference with my memory, reaction time and ability to focus.”

Last week, the CFL Alumni Associatio­n announced a partnershi­p with BrainHQ. Executive director Leo Ezerins said the involvemen­t of former CFL players in The Canadian Sports Concussion Project, founded by neurosurge­on Dr. Charles Tator, made the initiative a logical next step.

“We wanted to look at what we could do for alumni and current players, beyond the scope of sport, and the general community as well,” said Ezerins, a former linebacker with Hamilton and Winnipeg. “I remember going into a grocery store a couple of years ago and a woman coming out asking, ‘Where did I park my car?’

“We’ve all been there and unfortunat­ely with all the discussion about concussion­s and head injuries . . . we somehow feel we’re different but we’re all in the same boat. There’s plenty that can be done to help dayto-day living.”

CFL alumni aren’t the only players using BrainHQ as NFL star quarterbac­k Tom Brady acknowledg­ed just before the 2017 Super Bowl he also utilizes the program. So do fellow quarterbac­k Brian Hoyer — Brady’s backup in New England — and New Orleans tight end Ben Watson.

BrainHQ also has a contract with the U.S. Department of Defence covering active, reserve, and retired Marines, U.S. Army, Air Force and Navy personnel. A company official said BrainHQ works with baseball, NHL, NBA and FIFA players but wouldn’t divulge specific users.

“Whenever a player talks about BrainHQ, we are appreciati­ve,” the official said. “But we do not solicit public endorsemen­ts from users.”

Ezerins, 61, of Winnipeg, uses BrainHQ and says it benefits him.

“It got me on track and on course,” he said. “It’s very very helpful.”

Dr. Henry Mahncke, a research neuroscien­tist who’s the CEO of parent company Posit Science Corp., said brain exercise can deliver positive results, regardless of one’s age.

“What we’ve built is a set of braintrain­ing exercises designed specifical­ly to make the brain faster and more accurate,” he said. “What’s different is the older approach to cognitive training was like practising for a test . . . when you met someone you’d make a little rhyme in your head and you’d remember that name.

“Those techniques don’t really work well if your brain isn’t working that well because you have to remember to do them. So they came at this from a very different angle, which is to say, ‘Can we make the basic machinery of the brain faster and more accurate?’ It turns out if you do that you can improve cognitive function.”

Mahncke said brain research has changed dramatical­ly since the 1980s, when he said the brain was likened to a computer chip that was pretty much formed by age 13. If it was damaged, the common belief was little could be done.

“We no longer think of the brain as fixed and recognize it’s what we call plastic,” he said. “It’s constantly reorganizi­ng and changing itself structural­ly, functional­ly and chemically in response to what we ask it to do.

“If we ask the brain to do the right thing we can probably improve aspects of cognitive function and world function by training the brain the right ways. That basic science . . . is what led us to build these brain exercises and BrainHQ and see them put to use in this way.”

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