Tag Archives: concussion

NFL Week 15 injuries: Texans’ C.J. Stroud still in concussion protocol, Dolphins enter bout vs. Jets banged up – CBS Sports

  1. NFL Week 15 injuries: Texans’ C.J. Stroud still in concussion protocol, Dolphins enter bout vs. Jets banged up CBS Sports
  2. NFL Week 15 Preview: Fantasy football advice, betting tips and matchups to watch | NFL and NCAA Betting Picks Pro Football Focus
  3. When will CJ Stroud return to action for Houston Texans? | khou.com KHOU.com
  4. With Texans QB C.J. Stroud in concussion protocol, Davis Mills prepping to start against Titans: ‘Looking forward to it’ KPRC Click2Houston
  5. Inside the NFL’s concussion protocol, from the eyes of Texans rookie Henry To’oTo’o Houston Chronicle

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Maude Apatow Says She Suffered Concussion in ‘Little Shop of Horrors’ Onstage Accident – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Maude Apatow Says She Suffered Concussion in ‘Little Shop of Horrors’ Onstage Accident Hollywood Reporter
  2. Maude Apatow Reveals She Sustained a Concussion While Performing in ‘Little Shop of Horrors’ PEOPLE
  3. Maude Apatow got a concussion by running into a WALL dashing offstage during Little Shop Of Horrors Daily Mail
  4. Maude Apatow Talks Broadway Debut in Little Black Dress & Black Platforms on ‘Seth Meyers’ Footwear News
  5. Maude Apatow shares she sustains a concussion during Little Shop of Horrors performance Geo News
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Leon Edwards Mocks Kamaru Usman at UFC 286 Presser: ‘He’s Got A Concussion’ | UFC 286 | MMA Fighting – MMAFightingonSBN

  1. Leon Edwards Mocks Kamaru Usman at UFC 286 Presser: ‘He’s Got A Concussion’ | UFC 286 | MMA Fighting MMAFightingonSBN
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  3. Bisping Meets Usman Brilliant Interview On Edwards Trilogy, That KO, Revenge, Violence #UFC286 BT Sport
  4. Kamaru Usman responds to Leon Edwards: ‘I almost feel like he’s forgetting what happened’ MMA Fighting
  5. Leon Edwards: ‘I Want to Be an Inspiration for Kids Who Were Like Me’ Rockdale Newton Citizen
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New concussion protocol for kids: Get them back to school sooner

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For years, the treatment protocol for children with concussions involved keeping them out of school to rest in a quiet, dark room with reduced access to screens until they felt better. In the past decade, however, doctors have been moving toward encouraging kids to return to school and light activity after only a couple of days of rest, even if symptoms persist.

A recently released study involving more than 1,500 children backs the new approach. It found that an early return to school — which researchers defined as missing less than three days — benefited children ages 8 to 18, who had less severe symptoms two weeks after their concussion compared with kids who stayed home longer. In fact, a longer stay at home seemed to delay recovery.

The idea is to allow children to “maintain as much normalcy and routine as possible, obviously with academic supports and modifications when needed,” said Christopher Vaughan, a neuropsychologist at Children’s National Hospital in Washington who led the study.

Many doctors and institutions have already adopted that treatment plan. “We certainly have changed our protocols to recognize that too much rest is not good, that individuals need to go back to activity as soon as they’re able to tolerate it, with modifications, and that they need to be doing their healing in their environment, which for children is school,” said pediatrician Paul Berkner, medical director at University of New England and president of the Maine Concussion Management Initiative.

The new study “confirms our recommendation, and it gives credence to the fact that they may in fact, get better faster if we do that,” he added.

Vaughan said that “around a quarter of the population or more has sustained a concussion, many of which occurred during childhood. The vast majority of people will go on to live healthy and productive lives, but because brain injuries like concussions have the potential to be harmful if not treated properly, we take every injury seriously.”

He teamed up with colleagues from hospitals and universities across Canada to determine whether the number of days a child missed school after a concussion affected their symptoms. The researchers analyzed records from an earlier study of 1,630 children ages 5 to 18 who had been treated for concussion at nine Canadian pediatric emergency departments. There was an equal number of boys and girls, and the concussions were not limited to those caused by sports. Children missed an average of three to five days of school, with younger children on average returning to school earlier than older children.

The study showed “significant” associations between an earlier return to school and improved symptoms for kids 8 and above, and especially for those who initially felt worse. (There was not enough data for a finding involving kids ages 5 to 7.) This led researchers to suggest that a quicker return to school may reduce stress about missed classes and allow a child to stay on a normal sleep schedule and resume light-to-moderate physical activity earlier, all of which they believe will lead to a faster recovery. On the other hand, prolonged activity restriction and isolation, they suggested, could raise risks for anxiety and depression, and being at home could increase screen time.

Berkner said that most parents of patients he has treated haven’t pushed back against the new recommendations. And schools are ready to help.

“Most schools have concussion protocols, both for physical activity and also for academic accommodations,” said Sigrid Wolf, a pediatric sports medicine doctor at Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago. In Illinois, each school is required to have a concussion oversight team to assist with providing accommodations such as taking breaks, having extra time on tests or assignments or reading printed material rather than text on screens.

Although they won’t go to gym glass or to recess, they will be encouraged to engage in light activity, such as walking or riding a stationary bike. “Light-to-moderate physical activity also helps kids recover faster from concussions,” Wolf said.

A concussion damages the connections between nerve cells in the brain, which alters how the brain functions until those pathways are repaired. It’s important to give the adequate brain time to rewire itself after a concussion. If a child returns to athletic activities before their brain has healed and sustains another concussion, that second injury could generate more severe symptoms — and, in rare cases, could lead to brain swelling, Wolf said.

But a concussion only raises the risk of subsequent concussions slightly, Wolf said. Furthermore, “each concussion is different. So just because you had a severe concussion the first time doesn’t mean the next time, you’ll have a severe concussion.”

Signs of a concussion fall into five categories, Wolf said: physical symptoms, such as headache, sensitivity to light and sound, neck pain and nausea; vestibular symptoms, such as dizziness and balance problems; cognitive symptoms, such as memory, concentration or processing speed; emotional symptoms, such as irritability and depressed or anxious mood; and sleep and energy symptoms, such as tiredness, increased sleep and difficulty falling or staying asleep.

If a possible concussion has occurred during an activity, it’s important to pull your child off the field or court right away. “We know that kids recover quicker when they’re removed from play immediately, she said. “Continuing to play for even 15 minutes after you have a head injury is a risk factor for having prolonged concussion symptoms.” The mantra: “If in doubt, pull them out.”

The next step is to consult a health professional, who can help you determine if your child has a concussion and when your child should return to school; for example, children with a preexisting history of headaches or migraines may require additional support for their return to school, Berkner said.

“We’ve really learned a lot more about concussions and how to treat concussions than we knew even 10 years ago,” Vaughan said. “Many people still believe that engaging in exercise is bad when you have a concussion, but there have been multiple research studies in animals and in humans showing that light noncontact aerobic exercise, usually started just several days after a concussion, is associated with a faster recovery.”

Vaughan and Wolf also said concussion experts are moving away from the preseason baseline cognitive testing that is often conducted by schools and athletic teams, because of doubts about the accuracy of the tests.

When deciding whether a patient should go back to sports, Vaughan focuses on reports from the child and their parents. Signs that a kid is fully recovered include: “They’re not having symptoms at home, they’re not having symptoms when they exercise, their school performance and cognitive functioning appears normal. Their parents see them as being normal again.”

While doctors want parents to understand the potential severity of concussions, they also want them to take heart in the fact that most children recover within a month.

“We take all brain injury seriously regardless of what they’re called or how many symptoms show up afterward,” Vaughan said. “Thankfully, many [children] get better relatively quickly. And certainly, if somebody does not do anything to continue to injure their brain during the recovery process, we expect a full recovery and return to normal life activities.”

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Three or more concussions add up to long-term cognitive problems, study suggests | Concussion in sport

Experiencing multiple concussions may be linked to worse brain function in later life, suggests a study of nearly 16,000 people.

Among 15,764 people aged 50 to 90, those who reported three or more concussions had worse complex planning and attention scores on a range of cognitive tests.

People who had experienced four or more concussions showed poorer attention, processing speed and working memory.

“What we found was that … you only really need to have three lifetime concussions to have some kind of cognitive deficits in the long term,” said Dr Matthew Lennon, the study’s lead author and a PhD candidate at the University of New South Wales’s Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing.

“If you have multiple concussions in your teens, 20s, 30s and 40s, you will still be feeling the effects when you’re 70 or 80.”

The findings come the day after the first hearings of a Senate inquiry into concussions and repeated head trauma in contact sports. The inquiry was established in the wake of increasing public concern and ongoing reporting by Guardian Australia about sporting organisations’ management of player concussions and the effects of long-term exposure to heavy knocks that may not result in a clinical diagnosis of concussion but still cause damage to the brain.

A large and growing body of scientific evidence has shown links between repeated exposure to head injury and sub-concussive blows in contact sports and the neurodegenerative disease chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), which has been found in the brains of multiple Australian sportspeople, from amateurs to professionals.

Lennon’s research found that while people who had experienced repeated concussions had measurably worse cognitive performance, the differences were not drastic. “We’re not talking 20 or 30 IQ points – we’re talking maybe a couple of IQ points’ difference,” Lennon, who is also a medical doctor, said.

The benefits of sport to physical and cognitive health were significant, Lennon emphasised. “When we looked at the subgroup analysis [in data yet to be published] … if you’d suffered a concussion while playing sport, you actually had better working memory and processing speed than those who had never suffered a concussion at all.

“What that tells us is that even if you have been concussed the benefits of playing sport, particularly as a young person, outweigh the risks to your long-term cognition,” Lennon said. “That makes sense when we look at the overall data because we know that blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes … they’re all really significant risks to our cognitive health.”

Lennon’s research did not investigate CTE or the cumulative effect of exposure to sub-concussive blows.

The paper argued, however, that given the “hotly debated” issue of when people ought to stop participating in higher-risk activities, such as contact sports, the finding that three or more concussions caused long-term cognitive deficit offered a benchmark.

“This is a critically important result. It gives a clear threshold at which mid to late life cognitive deficits can be realistically expected,” the paper said. “When making recommendations for those who have suffered recurrent [traumatic brain injury] clinicians should be cognizant that some long-term cognitive deficits can be expected after 3 or more.”

The research, published in the Journal of Neurotrauma, forms part of a wider project known as the Protect study, which follows UK participants for up to 25 years to understand factors affecting brain health in later life.

Lennon said a benefit of his study was its non-athlete cohort, as most previous studies into the link between concussion and cognitive outcomes had focused on professional or university athletes. “They haven’t really included the average person.”

On average, participants reported their last head injury 30 years prior to the study. The study’s authors conceded the long period that had elapsed since the experiences of concussion was a potential limitation.

“The retrospective design of the study, with elderly participants often recalling details of events more than three decades in the past, may have caused an underreporting of head injuries and thus an underestimate of the size of their effect,” they wrote.

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Bucs’ Russell Gage hospitalized overnight after suffering concussion and neck injury

Russell Gage left Monday’s game on a backboard and was transported to a hospital. (Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers receiver Russell Gage left Monday’s playoff game against the Dallas Cowboys on a backboard after a frightening injury late in the game. He was taken to a local hospital to be evaluated for a concussion and neck injury and kept overnight for observation.

Cowboys safety Donovan Wilson made contact with Gage’s head after an incomplete pass late in the fourth quarter of an NFC wild-card game. Gage fell to his rear after the pass, and Wilson hit him from behind, snapping Gage’s head forward. Wilson wasn’t targeting Gage’s head. He was already committed to the tackle when Gage fell.

Gage appeared to try to stand up from the hit, but couldn’t. He remained laying on his back. Players from both teams surrounded Gage as athletic trainers tended to him. After several moments, athletic trainers placed Gage on a backboard and eventually lifted him onto a cart, where he was taken off the field.

Tuesday morning, the Buccaneers confirmed Gage had suffered a neck injury and a concussion on the play and had movement in all his extremities.

“After suffering a neck injury and concussion during the fourth quarter of last night’s game, Russell was taken to a local hospital where he remained overnight for additional testing and observation,” the team statement said. “Russell has had movement in all extremities and will continue to undergo additional testing today. We will provide additional information as it becomes available.”

Play resumed after Gage left the field Monday in a 31-14 Cowboys win. Bucs head coach Todd Bowles told reporters after the game that Gage was able to move his fingers while on the field after the hit.

Gage was initially listed as questionable prior to Monday’s game after he injured his back on a touchdown catch in Week 18.

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David Blough will start for Cardinals after Colt McCoy experiences concussion symptoms

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The Cardinals will start their fourth different quarterback of the last four weeks on Sunday.

David Blough will be the Cardinals’ starting quarterback against the Falcons, Arizona head coach Kliff Kingsbury said today.

Kingsbury said on Wednesday that Colt McCoy had cleared the concussion protocol and was slated to start this week, but today Kingsbury said McCoy has experienced more concussion symptoms and will be out.

Trace McSorley, who started last week’s game, will back up Blough.

The Cardinals signed Blough off the Vikings’ practice squad two weeks ago after Kyler Murray tore his ACL in Week 14. McCoy started in place of Murray in Week 15 but suffered a concussion, which led to McSorley starting Week 16. And now Blough will start Week 17.

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NFL’s chief medical officer says Tua Tagovailoa showed ‘nothing that would have triggered’ concussion protocol

Tua Tagovailoa’s visit to the concussion protocol drew tons of controversy – and it seems like history is repeating itself.

The Miami Dolphins quarterback is in concussion protocol for the second time this season after Sunday’s game against the Green Bay Packers – however, the league is saying he showed no signs of such an injury during the game.

Tagovailoa reported symptoms the day after the game, but the league’s chief medical officer, Dr. Allen Sills, said Tuesday in an interview with NFL Network that he showed nothing “that would have triggered the protocol” during the game.

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Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa looks to the sidelines during the first half of an NFL football game against the Cincinnati Bengals, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, in Cincinnati. Tagovailoa suffered a second frightening injury in five days when he was carted off the field Thursday.
(AP Photo/Jeff Dean)

“What our spotters and our unaffiliated neuro doctors are looking for is any blow that transmits force to the head or neck area, followed by that injury behavior,” Sills explained. “And so, there are many blows to the head that occur during a game. We are always looking for the blow plus the injury behavior and obviously if we see any injury behavior, then there’s a call down made to evaluate that player. Also, if a player identifies any symptoms or a teammate, coach, official, anyone else identifies symptoms, that also initiates a protocol. So many people can initiate the protocol and in this game on Sunday, none of those factors were present. There were no visible signs present, even though there was a blow to the head and the player did not report any symptoms, despite being in contact with the medical staff throughout the game. So, there was nothing that would have triggered the protocol in the moment.”

Tua Tagovailoa #1 of the Miami Dolphins takes the field prior to a game against the Green Bay Packers at Hard Rock Stadium on December 25, 2022, in Miami Gardens, Florida.
(Megan Briggs/Getty Images)

AARON RODGERS THINKS DOLPHINS SHOULD CONSIDER SHUTTING TUA TAGOVAILOA DOWN FOR REST OF SEASON

It’s unknown when exactly Tagovailoa suffered the concussion, but it’s widely regarded he suffered it after he shoveled a pass to tight end Durham Smythe and was tackled from behind in the second quarter, resulting in his head smacking the grass at Hard Rock Stadium on Christmas Day. 

Tagovailoa remained in the game but it wasn’t pretty, as he threw three straight interceptions on Miami’s final three drives while the Packers scored 16 unanswered points to win 26-20 on the road to keep their playoff hopes alive.

That tackle was eerily similar to the hit he took in Week 3, where he was wobbly post-hit but played just three days later, then suffered a concussion that sent him to the hospital and forced the NFL to make changes to its protocol.

The hit to the head was so bad that Tagovailoa’s hands curled up on the field. Many speculated that he should’ve been in concussion protocol after that hit against the Bills. 

Instead, he practiced like normal leading up to the early game of the week.

Tua Tagovailoa #1 of the Miami Dolphins looks to pass against the Detroit Lions during the first quarter at Ford Field on October 30, 2022, in Detroit, Michigan.
(Rey Del Rio/Getty Images)

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Tagovailoa finished Sunday’s loss to the Packers 16 of 25 for 310 yards, one touchdown and three interceptions. He surpassed 200 yards in the first half alone after some long completions, including an 84-yard touchdown catch-and-run to Jaylen Waddle.

The 8-7 Dolphins currently sit as the seventh seed in the AFC playoff picture, but they have lost each of their last four games.

Fox News’ Scott Thompson contributed to this report.

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Chargers safety Derwin James Jr. reportedly won’t be suspended after he was ejected for a brutal hit on Colts WR that left both in concussion protocol

It didn’t take long before everyone knew that Los Angeles Chargers safety Derwin James Jr. might be ejected for a vicious hit on Indianapolis Colts receiver Ashton Dulin.

James came in with the crown of his helmet and hit Dulin in the head and neck area after Dulin made a short catch. The hit sounded like something exploded on the field, and the crowd immediately reacted. Dulin was down for a few moments.

“We’ve watched a lot of football, I don’t know if I’ve seen a hit quite like that,” ESPN analyst Troy Aikman said.

Los Angeles Chargers safety Derwin James Jr. (3) was ejected after a hit on Indianapolis Colts wide receiver Ashton Dulin on Monday night. (AP Photo/Zach Bolinger)

James got a 15-yard penalty and was disqualified for the hit. That type of hit wasn’t outlawed decades ago, but it was shocking to see it in the current environment. Aikman spoke about it for a while after James was ejected.

“That was as big of a collision as I’ve seen in a long, long time,” Aikman said.

Dulin went back to the locker room shortly after the hit and was later ruled out with a concussion. Head coach Brandon Staley said after the Chargers’ win that James had entered concussion protocol. Dulin was defenseless on the play and James hit him in the head and neck with the crown of his helmet — it was practically a textbook example of what the NFL is trying to erase from the game.

While James reportedly won’t be suspended for his hit on Dulin, according to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, he could face a fine from the NFL for his aggressiveness. The standard fine for James’ hit could be as high as $21,218 for using his helmet, according to the NFL and NFL Players Association. A hit on a defenseless player comes with a slightly smaller fine of $15,914.



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