home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT1714>
- <title>
- Dec. 12, 1994: Medicine:Chin Music
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 12, 1994 To the Dogs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 71
- Chin Music
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Doctors warn that relentless blows to the head may be giving
- football players lasting brain damage
- </p>
- <p>By David E. Thigpen--With reporting by Julie Grace/Chicago and Alice Park/New York
- </p>
- <p> Like most National Football League players, New York Jets receiver
- Rob Moore is accustomed to getting hit hard and jumping right
- back into the fray. But Thanksgiving weekend, as his team faced
- the Miami Dolphins, the 6-ft. 3-in., 205-lb. Moore caught a
- pass and got clocked so badly that he couldn't get up--at
- least not for three minutes. When coaches and trainers finally
- hauled him to his feet, he was so dizzy and disoriented that
- a team doctor forced him to spend the rest of the game on the
- bench. Hours later Moore was still complaining of nausea and
- a severe headache. Though he had no sprains or broken bones,
- the problem was potentially more devastating than a cracked
- rib or battered knee: he had suffered a concussion--an invisible,
- sometimes short-lived but often dangerous injury to the brain.
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, the Jets receiver is not alone. On just about
- any fall weekend, as the 28 N.F.L. teams square off on their
- 100-yd. battlefields, three or four players will be knocked
- out of the action by concussions. At least 40 such injuries
- have occurred this year, and in the past six weeks the casualties
- have included an unusually large number of highly paid stars.
- Even in a sport long admired and abhorred for its body-crunching
- brutality, concern about the carnage is rising. Players, coaches
- and fans may never forget some of this season's scariest images:
- the vacant, confused stare of Dallas Cowboys quarterback Troy
- Aikman after he collided chin-first with a blitzing Phoenix
- Cardinal; the sight of Buffalo Bills receiver Don Beebe lying,
- out cold, on the field, with one forearm pointed stiffly into
- the air; the awful stillness of New York Giants quarterback
- Dave Brown after his head was slammed to the turf by a Houston
- Oilers linebacker. The high toll among quarterbacks (the Cleveland
- Browns' Vinny Testaverde and two Los Angeles Rams passers also
- went down with concussions) has led some N.F.L. watchers to
- joke morbidly that the QB is a species more endangered than
- the spotted owl.
- </p>
- <p> A concussion, as defined by the Professional Football Athletic
- Trainers Society, is a "jarring injury of the brain resulting
- in dysfunction." Simply put, it is a shock to the brain--usually
- caused by a powerful blow to the head--that can result in
- vertigo, disorientation and momentary unconsciousness, or even
- permanent memory loss, coma and death. Dr. Robert Cantu, a neurosurgeon
- at Emerson Hospital in Concord, Massachusetts, explains that
- when the head is hit, "the brain is shaken in the cranium much
- like Jell-O in a bowl."
- </p>
- <p> Even non-fans know that concussions are a part of any contact
- sport, and the injury is certainly not new to the N.F.L. According
- to the league commissioner's office, the rate of player concussions--one every 3.5 games--has been unchanged since 1989, the
- first year statistics were kept. In 1979 Cowboys quarterback
- Roger ("the Dodger") Staubach retired after four concussions
- in one season, and Jets receiver Al Toon hung up his cleats
- in 1992 after 10 career concussions. N.F.L. players even have
- their own concussion-related argot. Mild blows are known as
- dingers or bell ringers (because players usually have a ringing
- in their ears), and a player who has suffered a severe hit is
- said to have been "sent to dreamland."
- </p>
- <p> While concussions may be no more common than in the past, there
- is now a heightened awareness among team doctors, coaches and
- players (and their agents) that the injuries are often more
- serious than they seem. Says San Francisco 49ers quarterback
- Steve Young, who has had his bell rung several times: "People
- are realizing that nowadays, with players' size and velocity,
- the physics of some of the hits are taking a toll on people's
- heads." Medical experts warn that scientific knowledge of the
- long-term effects of even minor blows to the brain is sparse.
- Increasingly concerned, N.F.L. commissioner Paul Tagliabue has
- called a special meeting this week with brain-injury specialists.
- </p>
- <p> School officials are just as worried, for while concussions
- in the N.F.L. get the most press, the danger of getting knocked
- out stalks all football players, from the pros to the Pee Wees.
- Studies have claimed that 20% of high-school and college players
- suffer concussions in a season (apparently using a much broader
- definition of the injury than the N.F.L. does). Says Dr. Martin
- Samuels, a Harvard Medical School neurologist: "The loss of
- consciousness that occurs in football is so frequent it's frightening."
- </p>
- <p> This season two N.F.L. injuries in particular have helped focus
- attention on the threat that concussions pose not only to a
- player's career but also to his long-term health. In October,
- Chicago Bears running back Merril Hoge retired at age 29 after
- his second concussion of the season left lingering effects.
- "I just couldn't come out of it," Hoge recalls. "Ten days after
- it happened I still had headaches. I was dizzy, lethargic, constantly
- sleepy, and my memory was shot. I couldn't remember what I was
- talking about from one minute to the next." Hoge believes the
- second concussion was so serious because he returned to action
- less than two weeks after his first one. "A player should be
- required to take recovery time," says Hoge, "and I mean more
- than a week or two, regardless of how he says he feels." Eight
- weeks after his injury, Hoge is still recovering.
- </p>
- <p> Troy Aikman, 28, who guided the Cowboys to victory in the last
- two Super Bowls, could be forced into early retirement at any
- time. In an Oct. 23 game against the Cardinals, he took a terrifying
- blow to the chin from Wilber Marshall, a freight train of a
- linebacker. It caused the sixth concussion of Aikman's five-year
- career, and his second in 10 months. Aikman now says he is symptom
- free and ready to play, an attitude that worries his agent,
- Leigh Steinberg. "Players have a better grasp of the contents
- of a can of diet soda than they do of the effects of their brain
- rattling against their skull," Steinberg says. "They accept
- way too much risk."
- </p>
- <p> Neurologists agree. Harvard's Samuels points out that blows
- to the head may shear the microscopic fibers known as axons,
- which, like the wires of a switchboard, provide the crucial
- connections among brain cells. If enough axons are damaged or
- broken, unconsciousness can occur. And if the impact is severe,
- it may affect the brain stem, disrupting the electrical signals
- that regulate heartbeat, breathing and blood pressure. Long-term
- implications are virtually unknown, but many doctors fear players
- could suffer lasting declines in memory and other cognitive
- abilities. "There are no tests done on 60-year-old retired quarterbacks,"
- says Dr. Joseph Maroon, a Pittsburgh neurosurgeon and consultant
- to the Steelers.
- </p>
- <p> What can be done to limit damage from concussions? Part of the
- answer lies right inside the standard pro-football helmet. It
- contains an inflatable sack designed to cushion blows. However,
- most players prefer not to inflate the sack because they feel
- it makes the helmet fit too tightly. A newer device is the ProCap,
- a shock-absorbing polyurethane cushion that attaches to the
- exterior of a helmet. The ProCap is used by 49ers tackle Steve
- Wallace and a few others, but most players find it too bulky.
- </p>
- <p> While adjusting their equipment, players need to adjust their
- attitude and drop the stoicism that has long been part of football's
- code of conduct. Says Aikman: "It's an unspoken rule that you
- play through injuries." The N.F.L. could consider adopting strict
- rules to prevent players from returning to action too soon after
- a concussion. Even professional boxing is more tightly regulated
- in many places. In Ohio, for instance, a boxer who is knocked
- out is forbidden to enter the ring again for 30 days.
- </p>
- <p> Most important of all would be more accurate medical evaluations.
- Maroon has developed a memory and dexterity test that he periodically
- administers to the Steelers, and the scores are kept on file.
- That way an injured player has benchmarks for gauging neurological
- damage. Until such testing is widely adopted, assessing the
- harm concussions inflict on players will be mostly guesswork.
- And they won't know the price of their glory.
-
- </p></body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-