The Day

Doctor: Hernandez’s brain severely damaged by disease

- By ALANNA DURKIN RICHER

Boston — Former New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez suffered substantia­l damage to parts of the brain that affect memory, judgment and behavior from the most severe case of a degenerati­ve disease linked to head blows ever found in someone so young, a researcher said Thursday.

Dr. Ann McKee, director of Boston University’s CTE Center, stressed she could not “connect the dots” between the brain disease chronic traumatic encephalop­athy and the behavior of the 27-year-old who hanged himself in April while serving life in prison for murder.

But McKee said CTE had significan­tly impacted key parts of Hernandez’s brain, including the hippocampu­s — which is associated with memory — and the frontal lobe, which is involved in impulse control, judgment and behavior.

“We can say collective­ly, in our collective experience, that individual­s with CTE — and CTE of this severity — have difficulty with impulse control, decision- making, inhibition of impulses or aggression, often emotional volatility and rage behaviors,” said McKee, who has studied hundreds of brains from football players, college athletes and even younger players, donat- ed after their deaths.

Hernandez hanged himself in prison days after he was acquitted in the 2012 drive-by shootings of two men in Boston and just hours before his former teammates visited the White House to celebrate their latest Super Bowl victory.

Prosecutor­s contended he gunned the two men down after one accidental­ly spilled a drink on him in a nightclub — and then got a tattoo of a handgun and the words “God Forgives” to commemorat­e the crime.

He had been serving a life sentence without parole in the 2013 killing of semi-profession­al football player Odin Lloyd when he killed himself.

Hernandez, who said he was innocent, did not raise CTE in his defense at either trial.

CTE, which can only be diagnosed in an autopsy, has been found in former members of the military, football players and boxers and others who suffered repeated head trauma.

BU researcher­s confirmed in September that Hernandez was diagnosed with Stage 3, out of 4, of the disease. But McKee had not publicly discussed her findings until a conference at the university on Thursday.

After Hernandez’s CTE diagnosis, his attorneys filed a lawsuit against the NFL and football helmet maker Riddell, accusing them of failing to warn Hernandez about the dangers of football. The lawsuit, which seeks damages for Hernandez’s young daughter, said he experience­d a “chaotic and horrendous existence” because of his disease.

While the outside of Hernandez’s brain appeared normal, the inside was riddled with CTE, said McKee, who showed images of Hernandez’s brain next to those of a typical 27-year-old.

In Hernandez’s brain, there was evidence of previous small hemorrhage­s, which is associated with head impacts, she said. Other parts, like the hippocampu­s, had begun to shrink and large holes were found in his brain’s membrane, McKee said.

Before Hernandez, the youngest brain they’ve examined that showed such severe CTE damage was 46 years old, McKee said.

“These are very unusual findings to see in an individual of this age,” McKee said. “We’ve never seen this in our 468 brains, except in individual­s some 20 years older,” she said.

Hernandez inherited a genetic profile that may have made him more susceptibl­e to the disease, McKee said.

 ?? STEVEN SENNE/AP PHOTO ?? Ann McKee, director of Boston University’s center for research into the degenerati­ve brain disease chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, or CTE, addresses an audience on the school’s campus Thursday about the study of NFL football player Aaron Hernandez’s...
STEVEN SENNE/AP PHOTO Ann McKee, director of Boston University’s center for research into the degenerati­ve brain disease chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, or CTE, addresses an audience on the school’s campus Thursday about the study of NFL football player Aaron Hernandez’s...

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