All posts tagged concussions

Dying For A Superbowl (or not)

Football-stretcher

Two NFL players put health in the spotlight this week and their stories are at opposite ends of the spectrum.

San Diego Chargers’ offensive lineman Kris Dielman, who happens to have two little kids, was quoted saying he would put going for a win ahead of his own health. Later in the article he says that he would get cleared by doctors but since the Chargers didn’t make the playoffs it’s a moot point.

This is in stark contrast to Ryan Clark, free safety of the Pittsburgh Steelers’, who will sit out today’s playoff game against the Broncos due to sickle cell trait and the issues associated with playing at altitude. Clark had problems in 2007, when playing in Denver ended up costing him his spleen, gallbladder, and about 30 pounds. He hasn’t played a game in Denver since.

Read more…

Ain’t That A Kick In The Head

Among all the other evidence that I took leave of my senses between the ages of 18 and 22, I played rugby in college. Fall and Spring. Six seasons, and a host of injuries that included three concussions. Since this was “the olden days,” I sat out of practice a week and that was it. No CT scans, or even much follow-up from the medical staff at my school. Other than my first trip to the concussion rodeo, I only ever saw a doc once.

This is a perfect example of “now that we know better, we do better.” Concussion awareness programs are everywhere today, from the NFL to elementary school (to The Onion). And now Dick’s Sporting Goods has created PACE, Protecting Athletes through Concussion Education.

Through PACE, Dick’s Sporting Goods will supply up to one million young athletes across more than 3,300 middle and high schools nationwide with ImPACT software, a scientifically-validated computerized concussion evaluation system. It is a computerized, neurocognitive assessment tool that is used by medical doctors, psychologists, athletic trainers, and other licensed healthcare professionals to assist them in determining an athlete’s ability to return to play after suffering a concussion. Compared to my experience, WHAT A CONCEPT!!!

Here’s an article about Schaumburg, Illinois schools’ experience with ImPACT.

Schools need to apply in order to get the software. To apply for your school, visit http://www.mydickssportinggoods.com/pace/ and click “Submit Your School” on the left-hand side.

Former Pittsburgh Steelers running back Jerome Bettis tries out the ImPACT baseline concussion software at the PACE event at Dick's Sporting Goods in White Plains, NY.

Bettman Says the Problem Isn’t Head Shots, the Problem is YOUR MOM

Just a love tap.

Seriously, Bettman? Seriously?

Your proposed “solution” to this little problem you  have, also known as  “players are taking each other’s heads off to the tune of 79 concussions this season and counting”, is to make sure that a team doctor takes the player to the training room to see if they can still count to five *instead* of doing it at the bench. That’s your big idea, your big braniac wave of genius to stop your marquee players from sitting out most of the season or spending the entire playoff run thanking their lucky stars they only  have a broken neck as opposed to, you know, BEING DEAD.

Jesus Christ, Bettman. You’ve got enormous, 200-lb 6-foot-3 guys wearing fucking body armour moving as fast as they can with the sole intent of slamming each other into the nearest hard surface they can find.  And in all this, something seems to have escaped your notice. So, here’s a hint, dude: Guys are getting hurt. And your solution, your great big Messiah move to fix this, is to make sure doctors check out the guy who just got brained in the training room instead of on the bench.

In other words, you’re doing exactly nothing to prevent more hits. You just want to make sure the next time someone gets brained, they get checked in to the hospital sooner ’cause then they’re back on the ice for the next hit sooner. Right?

This will fix nothing, you are a fool, and the ultimate reality here is that someone is going to die. I hate typing this because one, it sounds so overly fucking dramatic and two, I am not a fan of invoking death generally. But this is what is going to happen, and Pacioretty’s just lucky it didn’t happen to him. With the injuries that are happening now, it’s only a matter of time. And because you’re such a fucking blockhead, it’s obvious that that’s the only thing that it’s going to take to get you to change the rules.

I don’t watch hockey because of the hits. I don’t watch hockey because of the fights. I watch hockey because it’s fast and slick and I like watching the plays and the puck move and wicked goalie saves. Removing headshots from the game won’t change anything except maybe saving someone’s life.

Mario Lemieux Quoted In The Press As Stating “Wah, Wah, Wah”

Don't Make Mario Lemieux Angry

Wah wah wah.

So let me get this straight.

Mario Lemieux is the guy who employs Matt Cooke. Matt Cooke is the guy who got away scot-free after giving a guy a two-month concussion by intentionally nailing him in the head. Matt Cooke is also the guy that singlehandedly caused the NHL to change the way they deal with intentional hits to the head.

So when Mario made a statement yesterday about the way the NHL handled the aftermath of the Penguin-Islanders melee on Friday night, really, he should have chosen his words better. Because after reading the entire thing, all I could remember it saying was something like this:

WAH!

WAH!

WAAAAH!

I’M GOING TO TAKE MY TOYS AND GO HOME!

WAAAAAAAAAAH!

God, Mario. Seriously. You may have had a point in that the game went beyond an “entertaining hockey fight” to sheer absurdity. I’ll give you that. But in an atmosphere where whenever the players drop the gloves, the fans cheer just as loudly as they do for goals, in an atmosphere where players are employed specifically for their scrappiness, it’s not shocking in the least that a game gets out of hand occasionally. You think hockey fights like this are shameful? Fine. Then ban all fights. You cannot say that it’s okay to punch someone in the face once during a game, but not fifteen times. You cannot say it’s okay to punch someone in the face as long as you don’t really mean it. Because every 7-year-old watching that game cannot tell the difference, I guarantee you.

You also may have had a point in saying the league needs to handle intentional hits – especially those causing injury – better. I will also give you that.  But you might want to be careful walking around that Matt-Cooke-decorated-glass-house, is all I’m saying.

So threatening to take your toys and go home? Oh please, Mario. What are you gonna do? Sell off your cash cow because the Islanders didn’t get enough suspensions? Claim moral superiority after your goalie broke Matt DiPietro’s face in the first place?

Your words smack of nothing except high horsemanship. And given which team leads the league in penalties, it’s all pretty rich.

Concussions, and How to Spot Them

It seems we’ve been hearing a lot more about concussions in recent years, particularly with regard to football and hockey. There was Merril Hoge’s career-ending head injury after a concussion that ultimately resulted in a $1.55 million judgment against the doctor who cleared him to play, and players like Aikman and Young retiring earlier than expected at least in part because of concussions.  In the NHL, it’s questionable what the most notable outcome of January’s Winter Classic was: the Washington Capitals’ win over the home team or the Pens’ star forward Sidney Crosby’s eventual absence from the ice after a series of what some said were intentional hits to the head.

An almost-fanatical attention to head-hitting rules seemed to pervade this season in the NFL, so it’s clearly being taken seriously there, and players are regularly suspended in the NHL for so-called “dirty hits,” some of which can surely cause obvious or more insidious injury to the head. Not to mention? These can be contact sports. Things happen, intentional or not, and players hit the ground and equipment too.

A couple of new developments suggest the science of detecting concussions is getting better.

Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of medicine have developed a test that can be given quickly to players on the sideline who have just suffered a blow to the head. The test, which any coach or parent can be trained to administer, is remarkably accurate at detecting concussions, according to the study, which is published in the current issue of the journal Neurology.

A test like this is potentially big news- something cheap, accurate, and easy to administer immediately following a potential head injury would be a huge step forward, and could prevent a lot of really scary and dangerous reinjuries that occur when athletes insist they’re ready to go back in and trainers/doctors don’t have anything concrete with which to stop them.

In other concussion news, researchers at Ohio State have recently released a study, published in the Journal of Athletic Training, that examined high school athletes who have experienced head trauma.  The study suggests that the symptoms of head injuries and concussions manifest differently in girls than boys. As more and more girls are playing sports, including contact sports (yay!) it’s essential that their coaches, trainers, and parents realize that the symptoms they report of a concussion are different than what one might “expect” given the conventional wisdom, which has almost always analyzed boys and men.

For example, the study says that while the primary symptom of concussion for both boys and girls is headaches, the secondary symptoms differ quite noticeably.  Boys are more likely to report feeling disoriented or confused, or to have memory loss, while girls are more likely to report feeling sensitive to noise and sound, as well as being drowsy.  Couple that with previous studies that suggest that girls suffer concussions at higher rates than boys, and this is key information for anyone involved in girls and women’s sports.

Interesting stuff.  Don’t lead with your head, kids.

Image Credit: wakemedvoices.org

Katie is lucky to have never received a concussion while playing sports. Unless sledding counts as a sport, in which case she totally has.

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