Boston Herald

CTE WILL ONE DAY BE TREATABLE: HUB DOCS

Brain injury common among football players

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Sports-related brain disease CTE will some day shift from a post-mortem discovery to a treatable condition long before symptoms start, much like cancer, say local researcher­s and doctors speaking in Cambridge today.

“The future will be, as players are keeping track of how many head injuries and concussion­s they have, those would determine when they start to get tested to possibly prevent CTE from ever occurring,” said Rudy Tanzi, professor neurology at Massachuse­tts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, who also advises profession­al sports teams.

“Early prediction, early detection and early interventi­on to stop that pathology,” he said.

Tanzi, along with a panel of other medical profession­als and former athletes, are slated to lay out the most current breakthrou­ghs underway surroundin­g chronic traumatic encephalop­athy at the Powering Precision Health Summit.

CTE has been strongly linked to contact sports like football. It was found in the brains of Aaron Hernandez and former Pats linebacker Junior Seau, who killed himself in 2012.

Researcher­s have discovered the presence of the tau protein in brains studied for CTE after death. That protein leads to tangles in the brain that act as a brush fire, and head trauma is the match that causes inflammati­on to spread. For now, there is no way to diagnose CTE in the living.

But local biotech companies are working to change this. Lexington-based Quanterix is focusing on ways to detect the tau protein in blood with ultra-sensitive tools — which, Tanzi said, are “equivalent to finding a grain of sand in 2,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools.”

Cambridge-based AbbVie and Biogen are working on immunother­apies to stop the tau from spreading.

These new technologi­es couldn’t be more welcome, said panelist Peter Cronan, former Boston College football player and NFL linebacker. He remembers a slam to the head so forceful that he couldn’t accurately name the day of the week.

“I’ve good news and bad news,” the doctor told Cronan, now 62. “Your cognitive impairment is no worse than other people your age.”

But, the doctor added, “There’s no way to know how it’ll impact end of life.”

It is this uncertaint­y that needs to change, he said.

“Watching some of my friends over the years, there’s obvious deteriorat­ion occurring,” Cronan told the Herald yesterday. “And we can tie it all back to what we did as young men.”

‘Early prediction, early detection and early interventi­on to stop that pathology.’ — RUDY TANZI Mass General Professor of Neurology on treating CTE in future

 ??  ?? A-HEAD OF THE GAME: The brain disease CTE — or chronic traumatic encephalop­athy — which is often associated with football, will one day become a treatable condition, say Hub researcher­s and doctors.
A-HEAD OF THE GAME: The brain disease CTE — or chronic traumatic encephalop­athy — which is often associated with football, will one day become a treatable condition, say Hub researcher­s and doctors.
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