> Skip repeated content

Sports and the Adolescent Brain

The Huffington Post—October 1, 2010

Evaluation of Intra-articular Injuries as Predictors of Function aBy: Helene Pavlov, M.D., FACR, Radiologist-in-Chief at Hospital for Special Surgery

A few posts ago I wrote about the head injuries in athletes and the concerns for children who play contact sports. The Wall Street Journal (9/31/10) reported on a study published in the journal Pediatrics in which concussions more than doubled between 1997 and 2007 in children playing sports despite participation declining. My concern was not that children are playing contact sports, but rather that the sporting aspect of adolescence and maturity is very important to the youngsters' development. What I was attempting to identify is that many parents and children do not understand all the potential dangers associated with sports-related head injuries.

Following my post, new research suggests that athletes who have had multiple head injuries may be prone to developing a disabling neurological disease similar to ALS, otherwise known as Lou Gehrig's disease. The study was published in the September issue of the Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology. The research, which came out of Boston University School of Medicine and the Veterans Administration Hospital in Bedford has pinpointed evidence of a new disease that mimics ALS in two former National Football League players previously thought to have died of ALS. These findings may mean that athletes previously diagnosed with ALS might actually have had the related syndrome. Clearly, more research is needed.

So what does this mean for our children who are out on the field playing the sport of their favorite athletes? Although sports can cause serious injury to the brain if and when head to head or head to body contact is made, children are more susceptible than adults to injury and its consequences. A child's skull and brain continue to develop throughout adolescence and damage to this vital organ could be irreversible. The brain is a dynamic tissue and damage may not be noticeable until later in life.

Read the full story at huffingtonpost.com.

 

 

Need Help Finding a Physician?

Call us toll-free at:
+1.877.606.1555

Media Contacts

212.606.1197
mediarelations@hss.edu

Social Media Contacts