The Mercury News Weekend

Studying the brain through the mouth

High-tech mouth guards on local high school football players collect data on blows to the head

- CONCUSSION­S By Lisa M. Krieger lkrieger@bayareanew­sgroup.com

For spectators, Menlo School’s roughand-tumble football games are as traditiona­l as autumn leaves, apple cider and crisp air.

But the young athletes are wearing something high-tech and hidden: custom- designed mouth guards with motion sensors, collecting data that reveals what happens to the brain in the moments after a hit.

The new Stanford research project is the nation’s first study in youth to measure rotation and full motion of the head during impacts, according to coprincipa­l investigat­or and concussion expert David Camarillo, assistant professor of bioenginee­ring.

While his team previously has studied concussion in Stanford athletes and National Football League players, they sought to learnmore about the consequenc­es in the developing brain. An estimated 4 million teenagers and children play the sport, raising concerns about long-term cognitive impact.

“It’s important to expand our research to the high school level and younger,” he said, “because that’s where there are the most athletes.”

About 100 football players in three private schools — Menlo School and Sacred Heart Preparator­y in

“Themore research we can get on what it means to have concussion symptoms, that can really impact lives, and change them.” — Sam Weseloh, Menlo School junior

Atherton and Archbishop Mitty High School in San Jose— are volunteers in the first year of the study, which will continue through the 2018 football season. It aims to expand to more schools in 2019.

The players’ special mouth guards look like convention­al mouth guards, only a little bit bigger. Patriotica­lly molded from red, white and blue plastic, they’re custom- designed to fit each player’s mouth so they’re more comfortabl­e than convention­al mouth guards.

Embedded in the front, next to the incisor teeth, are gyroscopic sensors and accelerome­ters that measure the mouth guard’s position in space, aswell as the forces that are acting upon it. In essence, it documents how the head is moving.

It records any accelerati­on of 10 G-forces, a frequent occurrence in adult players. ( By comparison, space shuttle astronauts experience a maximum of 3 G-forces on launch and re- entry.) Then it wirelessly sends this data, via Bluetooth, for storage and analysis.

“There are no buttons, no wires,” said Will Mehring, a clinical research assistant for the study, who works with the volunteer players on the fields.

Videos of games and practices can match the player’s time- stamped data to each impact. The mouth guard measures the force; the video shows what caused it.

They hope to learn what impacts are most damaging and which positions are most vulnerable, said Mehring. They can even study “sub- concussive” impacts that aren’t recognized but are still potentiall­y dangerous

Using this informatio­n, “You can advise players to change their habits,” said Mehring. “Or you can tell coaches: ‘ You know, this specific practice in this drill — we saw that we had a very high number of impacts. So maybe you could consider training that skill or doing that drill in a different way, to make it safer for the players.’ ”

Helping carry and set up the electronic equipment on the field’s sidelines, research assistant and Menlo junior Sam Weseloh, 16, welcomed the research.

He suffered three concussion­s while playing football and has been advised by his doctor to stick to his other passion, baseball. But he still loves football, and many of his friends still play.

“The more research we can get on what it means to have concussion symptoms, that can really impact lives, and change them,” said Weseloh, who is looking forward to a career in medicine.

“Alot of kids play through injuries,” he said. “I know how concussion personally affects you as a teenager — you miss a lot of school.”

The debilitati­ng effects of repeated concussion­s on football players have been well- documented. The trauma is linked to chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, a progressiv­e neurodegen­erative brain disease. It’s incurable, with symptoms that include blurred vi- sion, dementia, depression, headaches, memory loss and mood swings.

What scientists still don’t clearly know is whether those injuries are the result of thousands of tiny im- pacts or singular, crushing blows to the brain, and the nature of the impacts that cause them.

The mechanical complexity of the brain means there is no direct relation- ship between a blow to the head and the likelihood of injury, according to Camarillo’s earlier work. Using computer modeling, they found that the key difference between impacts that led to concussion­s and those that did not has to do with how — and more importantl­y where — the brain shakes.

After a non injurious hit, their research suggests the brain shakes back and forth around 30 times a second in a fairly uniform way, with most parts of the brain moving in unison. In injury cases, the brain’s motion is more complex: an area deep in the brain called the corpus callosum, which connects the left and right halves of the brain, shakes more rapidly than the surroundin­g areas, placing significan­t strain on those tissues.

A force to the side of the head, making it move from side to side or rotate, is more likely to produce a concussion than a blow that moves it back and forward, according to work by Dr. Jamshid Ghajar, a neurosurge­on at the Stanford Concussion and Brain Performanc­e Center.

Camarillo’s team is specifical­ly interested in what type of blows damage the brain’s wiring — those long threadlike parts of the nervous system, called axons, which carry signals.

The funding for the research comes from a $14.5 million donation by the Taube family to fund research at Stanford on concussion­s.

“This could potentiall­y help some of my friends,” said Weseloh. “We could step in, based on a reading from the sensors, before they go back out in the field and damage themselves further.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY NHAT V. MEYER — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Menlo School football player Jaden Richardson displays his mouth guard with built-in sensors. These devices are being used in a Stanford research project to study concussion­s in youth.
PHOTOS BY NHAT V. MEYER — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Menlo School football player Jaden Richardson displays his mouth guard with built-in sensors. These devices are being used in a Stanford research project to study concussion­s in youth.
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 ??  ?? William Mehring, left, assistant clinical research coordinato­r for Stanford’s Center for Clinical Research, and research assistant Sam Weseloh, a 16-year-old junior at Menlo School, set up a video camera to record football practice.
William Mehring, left, assistant clinical research coordinato­r for Stanford’s Center for Clinical Research, and research assistant Sam Weseloh, a 16-year-old junior at Menlo School, set up a video camera to record football practice.
 ?? PHOTOS BY NHAT V. MEYER — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Some Menlo School football players are participat­ing in a concussion research project.
PHOTOS BY NHAT V. MEYER — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Some Menlo School football players are participat­ing in a concussion research project.
 ??  ?? William Mehring, assistant clinical research coordinato­r for Stanford’s Center for Clinical Research, holds a football player’s mouth guard that has built-in sensors.
William Mehring, assistant clinical research coordinato­r for Stanford’s Center for Clinical Research, holds a football player’s mouth guard that has built-in sensors.

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