The Province

MORE CONCUSSION­S,

Test for CTE on the living would be turning point to connecting the dots, doc says

- Scott Stinson sstinson@postmedia.com twitter.com/Scott_Stinson

Aconcussio­n research paper was published last week that on first glance looks like it could have been produced by the School for the Study of the Right Bleeding Obvious.

The report from the Krembil Neuroscien­ce Centre says that, for patients showing symptoms of a concussion more than three months after the injury was suffered, the presence of a larger number of symptoms suggests the recovery period will be longer.

So, more symptoms is worse than fewer symptoms. You don’t say.

But the reality is that, with concussion research, any little bit of scientific advancemen­t helps. Even though it has now been several years since the long-term risks of brain injury became a controvers­ial topic in sports, there remain all kinds of unresolved questions.

So a study such as this one, which collected data from more than 100 people with long-term effects from concussion­s, and which gives doctors and trainers more informatio­n about who might be more likely to take longer to recover, is useful.

But the fact that science around concussion­s is advancing with slow, measured steps, is also why those involved with big-time sports can continue to say that the links between their games and something like chronic traumatic encephalop­athy (CTE) remain unproven.

Whether it has been NHL commission­er Gary Bettman on a number of occasions or CFL boss Jeffrey Orridge, just before the Grey Cup, they have insisted that the connection between contact sports and CTE has not been proven. This is technicall­y correct, as CTE has only ever been discovered in an autopsy, and as such there is no study that can compare the rate of CTE in a bunch of athletes with the rate of CTE in a group of non-playing controls. The commission­ers, whose leagues are dealing with lawsuits from former players that essentiall­y allege concussion negligence, can therefore retreat into the science-isn’t-settled defence and get away with it, even if there’s an ethical question about whether they even believe what they are saying.

But the science won’t necessaril­y always be unsettled. Dr. Charles Tator, a neurosurge­on at Toronto Western Hospital and one of the authors of the study mentioned above, concedes that the work on CTE is not conclusive.

“It is true that we can’t connect all the dots that we’d like to,” he said in a recent interview. “But science is moving in that direction.”

And it’s moving in the direction toward an elevated risk of CTE being flagged as a consequenc­e of multiple concussion­s, which are more likely to occur in contact sports like football and hockey. (The NFL’s health and safety director conceded a link between football and CTE last spring, which was a stark departure from the league’s previous stance, but commission­er Roger Goodell later said the acknowledg­ment was consistent with earlier assertions. He’s since fallen back on the importance of further study.)

Researcher­s around the world, including at the Canadian Concussion Centre, which Tator heads at the Krembil Neuroscien­ce Centre, are working on a test that would detect the presence of CTE in a living subject. If they get there, that holds the key to all the unanswered questions: is there a significan­t increase in the risk of developing CTE associated with all contact sports? And how much does that compare with the general population?

Are there non-athletes who develop CTE but don’t realize they have it, and if so is it possible that highrisk individual­s could be identified before they ever take up a sport that involves high-speed collisions? If a test for CTE in the living can be developed, Tator says, “it will then be much easier to connect the dots.”

“We’re not ready with a conclusion yet,” Tator says. “But I would say we are going to have this solved in the next few years.”

That’s a statement that holds tremendous implicatio­ns for pro sports.

Even as former football and hockey players have suffered mental illness after their playing days, taken their lives as a result, and were then discovered to have had CTE, there has always been an uncertaint­y about risk that has allowed the billion-dollar leagues to push forward. Players can make vast sums of money in a short time in these sports, and with the risk of long-term cognitive impairment not quantifiab­le, it’s one many remain fine taking.

But the risk remains there, clearly. Just hours after the CFL commission­er made his comments about CTE on the Friday before the Grey Cup, former player Matt Dunigan hosted a town hall session with fans in a hotel ballroom.

With Orridge sitting next to him on the stage, Dunigan joked repeatedly about his foggy memory, about having good days and bad, and about the fact the shadow of concussion­s still looms over him.

For Dunigan and countless others, playing football had a long-term price. It’s not the same for everyone, but the risk exists.

Science may soon determine just how much of one is there for those that take the field, or the ice.

And what will the sports leagues say then?

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Similar to other sports, NHL players get injured by shots to the head, with long-term consequenc­es afterward. Despite many opinions, bosses of some sports leagues have said the connection between contact sports and CTE has not been proven.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Similar to other sports, NHL players get injured by shots to the head, with long-term consequenc­es afterward. Despite many opinions, bosses of some sports leagues have said the connection between contact sports and CTE has not been proven.
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