Study Find Brain Damage in Former NFL Players

Until now, we couldn’t see evidence of chronic traumatic encephalopathy until autopsy.

F. Perry Wilson, MD MSCE

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If you happen to be reading this on a Sunday, Monday, or Thursday and live in the United States, there’s a good chance you’re watching NFL football tonight. 20 million people on average tune into these games, myself included. Go Eagles. It was my wife who captured why, I think — football players are simply the best athletes out there in terms of all around ability — strength, speed, power, and so on.

But of course there’s something else that draws us to these games — something a bit more primal — it’s, for lack of a better word, the hits. The tackles, the sacks, the bone-crunching collisions.

But it’s hard to fully enjoy the games if you’ve done a bit of reading into chronic traumatic encephalopathy — CTE — and the effect these collisions have on the individuals who play professional Football.

A recent autopsy study out of Boston University examined the brains of 376 former NFL players. 345 of those brains had evidence of CTE — that’s 92%.

Of course there is selection bias at play here — NFL players who donate their brains to science after their death are likely to do so for a reason. But it is getting pretty hard to deny…

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F. Perry Wilson, MD MSCE
F. Perry Wilson, MD MSCE

Written by F. Perry Wilson, MD MSCE

Medicine, science, statistics. Associate Professor of Medicine and Public Health at Yale. New book “How Medicine Works and When it Doesn’t” available now.

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