Thursday, May 17, 2012

Study Pinpoints Brain Damage In Vets Similar To Football Injuries

Drs. Lee E. Goldstein and Ann McKee, authors of a paper on chronic traumatic encephalopathy. Gretchen Ertl for The New York Times

Brain Ailments In Veterans Likened To Those In Athletes -- New York Times

Scientists who have studied a degenerative brain disease in athletes have found the same condition in combat veterans exposed to roadside bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan, concluding that such explosions injure the brain in ways strikingly similar to tackles and punches.

The researchers also discovered what they believe is the mechanism by which explosions damage brain tissue and trigger the wasting disease, called chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or C.T.E., by studying simulated explosions on mice. The animals developed evidence of the disease just two weeks after exposure to a single simulated blast, researchers found.

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More News On Brain Ailments In Veterans Likened To Those In Athletes

New study links exposure to even a single bomb blast to serious life-long brain disease -- Stars and Stripes
Report: Single Bomb Blast Causes Soldiers NFL-like Brain Trauma -- US News and World Report
'Blast Wind' Linked to Chronic Brain Injuries in Military -- US News and World Report
Explosions cause brain damage through head movement -- New Scientist
Boston scientists lead team that pinpoints brain damage in vets similar to football injuries -- Boston.com
Study links athletic, military brain injuries -- CBS/AP
Soldiers' brain damage similar to football players', study of chronic traumatic encephalopathy shows -- CBS
Veterans exposed to explosions may be at risk for dementia -- USA Today
Signs of brain disease found in soldiers exposed to IEDs -- CTV

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