Boston Herald

Tie between number of years in football, brain damage shown

BU study seen as ‘breakthrou­gh’

- By LINDSAY KALTER

The first concrete link between football and degenerati­ve brain disease was found in a new study by Boston University researcher­s that also showed the longer players play the game, the greater the risk of permanent damage.

Jonathan Cherry, lead author of the project, said the study also takes researcher­s one step closer to early diagnosis and treatment of the potentiall­y deadly condition.

“That middle step was kind of missing for a while,” said Cherry, a postdoctor­al fellow in neurology at Boston University School of Medicine. “Just by knowing there’s a connection, it’s incredibly beneficial so we have a place to start with potential therapies and identifyin­g it early on.”

The findings, published online Friday in Acta Neuropatho­logica Communicat­ions, show a direct correlatio­n between brain inflammati­on brought on by footballre­lated head injury and chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, or CTE.

Brains of 66 profession­al and collegiate football players, along with 16 non-athlete brains, were examined. Scientists used statistica­l modeling that strongly connected inflamed brain material to CTE. Researcher­s went a step further to compare the number of years playing football to the amount of damage in the brain that left players at higher risk of degenerati­ve brain disease.

“We saw that there was a connection there,” Cherry said. “Those who played football longer had more inflammati­on.”

CTE has been found in the brains of deceased athletes and others with a history of repetitive hits to the head, resulting in concussion­s. Yet while there has been plenty of conjecture on risk factors, research has yielded few definitive answers.

“It’s been suspected that inflammati­on has been involved, but there hasn’t been a lot of proof actually linking it to CTE,” Cherry said.

The study coincides with an upcoming announceme­nt from Boston University researcher­s later this morning about the brain of former Patriots running back Kevin Turner, whose death from ALS last spring at 46 was a suspected consequenc­e of CTE.

Chris Nowinski, a Harvard graduate and co-founder and CEO of the Waltham-based Concussion Legacy Foundation, said Cherry’s study is “the sort of breakthrou­gh that will lead scientists to be able to treat the disease.”

“It bolsters the knowledge that there’s a correlatio­n between length of career and brain damage,” said Nowinski, a former wrestler who said he endured several concussion­s with lasting consequenc­es. “To be honest, I’m glad my mom held me out of football until high school.”

Funding for this study was provided by the National Institute of Neurologic­al Disorders and Stroke, the National Institute of Aging, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n and the Concussion Legacy Foundation.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT STONE ?? INCrEASED rISK: Jonathan Cherry is lead author of a Boston University study that uncovered the first definitive link between the duration of a football player’s career and the risk of permanent brain damage.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT STONE INCrEASED rISK: Jonathan Cherry is lead author of a Boston University study that uncovered the first definitive link between the duration of a football player’s career and the risk of permanent brain damage.

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