CTE prevalent in deceased players, study shows

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Friday, September 18, 2015

A new study from the nation's largest brain bank found that 96 percent of the deceased NFL players tested showed positive results for having a degenerative brain disease connected with concussions.

The research, done by theDepartment of Veterans Affairs and Boston University and published by Frontline, identifiedchronic traumatic encephalopathy in 87 of 91 NFL players. CTE also appeared in 79 percent (131 of 165) of all football players studied.

"People think that we're blowing this out of proportion, that this is a very rare disease and that we're sensationalizing it," Dr. Ann McKee, who runs the lab as part of a collaboration between the VA and BU, told Frontline. "My response is that where I sit, this is a very real disease. We have had no problem identifying it in hundreds of players."

Researchers have said CTE is triggered by repeated head trauma and can cause memory loss, depression and dementia.

Former NFL tight end Tom Crabtree responded to the study's findings Friday on Twitter.

The NFL said in a statement that it is "dedicated to making football safer and continue to take steps to protect players, including rule changes, advanced sideline technology, and expanded medical resources."

"We continue to make significant investments in independent research through our gifts to Boston University, the [National Institutes of Health] and other efforts to accelerate the science and understanding of these issues," the league added.

The NFL gave a $1 million research grant to the brain bank in 2010.

Dr. Joseph Maroon, a Pittsburgh Steelers neurosurgeon who advises the NFL on head, neck and spine injuries, said earlier this year that the game "has never been safer" and downplayed the risk of CTE.

The 96 percent rate found in the study is consistent with a smaller sample size announced last year by the Department of Veterans Affairs in Massachusetts.

CTE can be definitively diagnosed only after death, though brain scans are being used to try to identify signs of the disease within living players. The deceased players used in the study agreed to donate their brains for testing.

Information from ESPN's Kevin Seifert contributed to this report.

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