Rome News-Tribune

Another Super Bowl, another brain trauma casualty

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It is ever harder to watch the Super Bowl without mixed feelings. Last week, as football fans geared up for the high holy day of sports on Sunday, researcher­s at Boston University confirmed that the late, great NFL quarterbac­k Ken Stabler was suffering from high Stage 3 chronic traumatic encephalop­athy when he died in July.

Score one more for CTE, the degenerati­ve brain disease increasing­ly linked with football. Few athletes were as charismati­c as The Snake during his young, hell-raising years with the Oakland Raiders. And few men have endured a middle age as crippling.

His partner, Kim Bush, said that his 60s were a nightmare of memory loss, insomnia and disorienta­tion, with headaches so severe that he often spent whole days in silence. As he witnessed other retired athletes succumbing to dementia, depression and other neurologic­al problems, he agreed to donate his brain to science; CTE, which is believed to arise from repetitive brain trauma, can only be diagnosed posthumous­ly.

After Stabler died at 69 of complicati­ons from colon cancer, Ann McKee, a neuropatho­logist who has been among the leading researcher­s into the condition, immediatel­y identified the telltale shrunken temporal lobe, small hippocampu­s, atrophy and shredded brain tissue.

With the diagnosis, Stabler joins more than 100 of his peers, including more than a half-dozen Hall of Famers, who appear to have suffered from CTE, including Junior Seau, “Iron” Mike Webster and Frank Gifford. Bennet Omalu, a medical examiner and University of California at Davis professor whose work was the basis of the film “Concussion” has estimated that nine out of 10 NFL players have the affliction.

After years of denial, the NFL has begun to acknowledg­e that CTE is a problem, and that being slammed repeatedly in the head is no different for football players than for boxers, or combat veterans, or hockey players, or any other mere mortal. California last year passed a law limiting contact practice for football players in middle school and high school, and the American Academy of Pediatrics has weighed in on the issue.

But more must be done. Omalu has questioned whether there should be an age of consent for football, since the brain damage appears to worsen with the number of hits, and thus, the number of years of contact. Others believe the game needs to be changed at every level to limit trauma.

Of course, that’s not what fans want to focus on, and who can blame them? Football is thrilling, and it’s hard to separate its mix of skill and violence and patriotism and marketing and nostalgia. Still, the casualties are mounting.

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