NFL & T.B.I. in Professional Football: An Evidence-Base Perspective
Saturday, July 10th, 2010.
Experts from Johns Hopkins Medicine hosted a press conference following a continuing medical education program on the epidemiology of head injury in professional football. This program was an evidence-based review of traumatic brain injury in the sport.
The NFL commissioner talks with the Pentagon Channel at Johns Hopkins conference on brain injuries in sports and military personnel.
- Conduct prospective longitudinal studies evaluating the value of clinical tests, serum biomarkers, imaging, and electrophysiological tests in a) differentiating players with and without traumatic brain damage, b) detecting the effect of preventive/therapeutic interventions, and c) predicting long-term cognitive and behavioral outcomes.
- The need for MRI and PET studies to determine in vivo morphological and functional correlates of physical impacts, concussions and long-term post-TBI cognitive decline.
- The need to implement MRI and electrophysiology studies to identify mechanisms of neural plasticity following MTBI.
For the area of long-term neuropsychiatric outcomes after TBI, the following research agenda was recommended:
- A study of former players, with state-of-the-art measures, to determine:
- Rates of neuropsychiatric disorders by age
- The relationship between neuropsychiatric disorders and cumulative exposure to sub-concussive or concussive impacts sustained across the player’s career. - Design and start a cohort study of retiring players for the same purpose.
Research recommendations for chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) include:
- Additional study of CTE pathology and neurobiology.
- Development of biomarkers to detect CTE in vivo among former players and other athletes.
- Development of animal models to test the hypothesis that repeat injury leads to degenerative tauopathy and to identify mechanisms that can be targets for intervention.
Recommendations for mitigating the consequences of TBI in football include:
- Development of a longitudinal concussion and “hits” database to capture prior and present episodes, quantify symptoms, document evaluations for return to play and document rehabilitation strategies.
Press Conference T.B.I. in Professional Football: An Evidence-Base Perspective
http://webcast.jhu.edu/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=3e43e3b9752446d7b469efd59133c834
Date: June 2010