If you watch football long enough, it won’t take you long to realize it’s a brutal game. But how brutal? According to the Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopahty (CSTE), football players are suffering massive amounts of brain damage throughout their playing careers.
(The top) image of healthy brain tissue. (The bottom image) is brain tissue of a middle-aged football player. It reveals the intense damage from repeated concussions received on the field. According to Dr. Ann McKee, co-director of the Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy (CSTE), the damage looks similar to that of an 80-year-old with dementia caused by Alzheimer’s disease. The CSTE have found the condition, called chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), in the donated brains of dead NFL players John Grimsley, Mike Webster, Andre Waters, Justin Strzelczyk and Terry Long. From CNN:
“What’s been surprising is that (the damage is) so extensive,” said Dr. Ann McKee, a neuropathologist at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Bedford, Massachusetts, and co-director of the CSTE. “It’s throughout the brain, not just on the superficial aspects of the brain, but it’s deep inside.”
The damage affects the parts of the brain that control emotion, rage, hypersexuality, even breathing, and recent studies find that CTE is a progressive disease that eventually kills brain cells.
The NFL takes steps to try and prevent damage like this from occurring, but clearly it still isn’t enough. A new wave of helmets have come into the league over the past couple of seasons, but it’ll probably be years before tests can be done to measure their effectiveness. Hopefully as technology grows stronger, new equipment will be invented to save players from major injury. But for now, football is still as brutal as it comes.