Ex-football player fears future with brain damage
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Former NFL tight end Ben Utecht told a
Senate hearing Wednesday that he fears where his history of brain
injuries will leave him in the future.
Utecht said he started experiencing memory loss at
age 29, after a football career in which he sustained five documented
concussions and innumerable dings to the head.
''It took losing my mind to care about my mind,'' said Utecht, 32.
His
testimony came as brain injuries in sports, particularly contact sports
like football, remain a concern for players and families. More evidence
suggests a link between head injuries and neurodegenerative diseases
including Alzheimer's and chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE.
On
Wednesday, the NFL agreed to remove a $675 million cap on damages from
thousands of concussion-related claims. More than 4,500 former players
have filed suit against the league.
Utecht, who was a member of
the Indianapolis Colts' championship team in 2007, said his final
concussion, suffered while playing for the Cincinnati Bengals in 2009,
required eight months of rehabilitation and forced his retirement from
the NFL after a six-year career.
In addition to memory loss,
Utecht said the brain damage he has suffered has changed his behavior to
the extent that his 5-year-old daughter is scared of him sometimes.
''As
a father, it puts the idea of traumatic brain injury on a whole
different level,'' Utecht said, choking up as he talked about his
daughter.
The Senate Special Committee on Aging asked a
four-person panel of witnesses what Congress could do to help improve
the prospects for those at risk for neurodegenerative diseases.
''Money,
money, money,'' said Robert Stern, professor of neurology,
neurosurgery, and anatomy and neurobiology at Boston University School
of Medicine. ''That's what it comes down to.''
Stern said that
studying diseases like CTE could not only benefit people suffering from
that disease, it could help researchers learn more about similar
neurodegenerative diseases, ultimately helping more people.
Stern
said that hits to the head that do nearly the same damage without
displaying the symptoms of a concussion are relatively under-studied and
possibly more dangerous than concussions, which he called ''just the
tip of the iceberg.''
''I fear that we have a major public health threat looming,'' Stern said.
Each
panelist said he would not allow his child to participate in contact
sports before high school, at the earliest, because of the risk of brain
injuries.
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