Los Angeles Times

Athlete had chronic brain trauma at 25

Ex-college football player is the youngest diagnosed with widespread CTE, a degenerati­ve disorder.

- By Melissa Healy melissa.healy@latimes.com

Researcher­s have found the hallmarks of chronic traumatic encephalop­athy throughout the brain of a 25year-old former college football player who sustained more than 10 concussion­s during about 16 years on the gridiron.

The unnamed athlete, described in a report published Monday by the journal JAMA Neurology, is the youngest patient to get a definitive diagnosis of widespread CTE — degenerati­ve brain changes accompanie­d by a range of neuropsych­iatric symptoms that are linked to repeated blows to the head. The condition can be diagnosed only after death because it requires direct examinatio­n of tissue throughout the brain.

The report authors noted that the brains of athletes as young as 17 had shown “focal lesions” — limited and isolated spots of clumped proteins — that suggested CTE. But they wrote that “widespread CTE pathology ... is unusual in such a young football player.” Most of the former athletes whose brain autopsies have revealed widespread CTE have been 45 to 80 years old.

The young man died of cardiac arrest resulting from a staph infection of the tissues surroundin­g the heart. His case is unusual in that before his death, he enrolled in a research study called Understand­ing Neurologic­al Injury and Traumatic Encephalop­athy, part of an effort to recognize the signs of CTE in living people.

As a result, researcher­s have detailed results of neuropsych­ological testing performed on the man before his death. Those tests showed that his overall levels of intellectu­al function were normal and that he was readily able to remember key events from his past. But his short-term memory and some elements of executive function were impaired.

The tests came in the wake of behavior that closely resembled that seen in several athletes who were found after their deaths to have brains riddled with clumps of tau protein, which is a hallmark of Alzheimer’s dementia and chronic traumatic encephalop­athy.

The young man, who had a family history of depression and addiction, was described as apathetic and joyless, with sleep problems and a low appetite.

He had been playing contact football since age 6, as a defensive linebacker and a special teams player. He suffered his first concussion at age 8. His played on a Division 1 college team for three years, including one as a redshirt freshman, and left the team at the beginning of his junior season because he was continuing to suffer headaches, blurry vision, anxiety and other post-concussive symptoms.

After he began failing courses, he left college just short of earning a degree and had difficulty maintainin­g a job. He smoked marijuana daily to relieve his headaches and anxiety, and had become abusive toward his wife.

The authors of the report, led by Boston University neurologis­t Dr. Ann McKee, noted that it was impossible to discern whether the young man’s cognitive profile and his behavior were early signs of CTE or possibly just depression. They were at least consistent with a diagnosis of post-concussive syndrome.

Neverthele­ss, McKee and her colleagues called the report “instructiv­e.” Along with other cases from the research study, the findings might make it easier to identify early signs of CTE in living individual­s who could take action before more damage is done.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States