Close Menu
X

Professional Football and Brain Injury

Personal injury lawyers who have handled traumatic brain injury (TBI) cases are now seeing the same cases of traumatic brain injury being reported by players in the NFL.

There have been many reports in the news about links between playing professional football and early onset of dementia. Now, according to a story in the San Francisco Chronicle, Congress is investigating. All this recent attention started with a New Yorker Magazine piece about the high number of pro football players with dementia, often misdiagnosed as Alzheimer’s.

One Concussion Is Enough to Cause Traumatic Brain Injury

None of these reports will come as much of a surprise to personal injury lawyers who have handled traumatic brain injury (TBI) cases. We know that just one concussion can cause a TBI with permanent effects. While most people who have continuing symptoms after a concussion make a complete recovery, a minority of people do not, and are left with permanent impairments. These impairments often include forgetfulness, difficulty finding the right words, and irritability. That this type of permanent injury can result from even a minor concussion makes it obvious that pro football players, who will usually have many concussions over a career, are likely to have a high rate of TBIs.

Appropriate testing can be hard to come by for NFL players too. The New Yorker story points out that often players are seen by a team physician, who works for management, and is under pressure to get the player back on the field.

Injuries Can Be Difficult to Diagnose

Many of these injuries are subtle, and don’t have physical manifestations that show up on diagnostic image tests, such as CAT scans or MRIs. The damage to the brain is so physically subtle that it often only shows up on autopsy. The New Yorker Magazine piece details how numerous brain autopsies involving football players showed what had happened to their brains.

Even Milder TBIs Can Cause Crippling Damage

These milder TBIs have their own name, MTBI—for Mild Traumatic Brain Injury. Many people who are injured in an accident don’t even realize that they have an MTBI. Friends, family member, and co-workers often fill in the gaps, and can be important sources of information about the problems that the person is having. Sometimes the person suffering from the injury thinks he or she is functioning well, only to hear from others that they are much different after an accident.

Since these MTBI injuries do not show up on standard image tests, the diagnosis is most often made by testing performed by a type of psychologist called a neuropsychologist. In the San Francisco Bay area, we have many talented neuropsychologists, but getting health insurers to pay for the extensive testing needed can be difficult.

Talk to a Traumatic Brain Injury Lawyer

Callaway & Wolf have handled many traumatic brain injury cases around the San Francisco Bay Area, including multiple trials, arbitrations, mediations, and out of court settlements. To request a free case evaluation from a San Francisco traumatic brain injury attorney, call us at 415-541-0300.

Facebook Twitter LinkedIn
HAVE A QUESTION? WE'VE GOT ANSWERS

Please do not include any confidential or sensitive information in this form. This form sends information by non-encrypted e-mail which is not secure. By submitting this form, I understand that it does not create an attorney-client relationship.

protected by reCAPTCHA Privacy - Terms