Leading Southwest Medical Expert Releases TBI Tips for NFL Players.Dr. David Durham Offers Tips to NFL NFL abbr. National Football League NFL (US) n abbr (= National Football League) → Fußball-Nationalliga Players to Promote Traumatic Brain Injury Traumatic brain injury (TBI), traumatic injuries to the brain, also called intracranial injury, or simply head injury, occurs when a sudden trauma causes brain damage. TBI can result from a closed head injury or a penetrating head injury and is one of two subsets of acquired brain Awareness NEW YORK New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of -- As the controversial impact of traumatic brain injury (TBI TBI 1. Thyroxine-binding index 2. Total body irradiation ) among NFL players expands, a leading Southwest medical expert has released five top tips every NFL player and football athlete should know. A neuropsychiatrist specializing in TBI, Dr. David Durham is the Managing Partner and Director of Neurocognitive Regeneration at the Mosaic Neuroscience Group in Santa Fe, New Mexico Santa Fe, more properly Santa Fé, (pronounced [ˈsænə feɪ] by natives, [ˌsænə ˈfeɪ] , with offices in Roswell as well as in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. . He offers the following: 1. A helmet does not protect the brain from blunt force. It simply reduces the intensity of force that reaches its tissue. 2. One severe traumatic brain injury can greatly improve with rest and rehabilitation. Minor or moderate brain injuries that occur repeatedly, without adequate recovery, will not improve. 3. One closed head injury of moderate severity increases the risk of dementia by almost seven times. 4. Repetitive injury to the brain over a short period of time (e.g. weeks), even if each injury is mild, amplifies trauma to the brain. 5. Assuming number three to be correct, the estimated statistical risk of having dementia by the age of sixty-five after sustaining only a mild (e.g. concussion) brain injury two, three, four...... eight, ten, and even twenty-five times, is "only" increased by an estimated two, six, eight, twenty, thirty eight, and eighty times respectively. "New NFL players ought to more carefully weigh the risks when they begin their career - which may take a lot of the sparkle from the diamond Superbowl ring," said Dr. Durham. "New players typically sustain several TBIs without realizing it just in the first week of their professional career. Still, they can mitigate their risk of sustaining a more severe brain injury if they learn to recognize early signs of trauma--if only because we have no way, as of yet, to slow the accelerated deterioration of the brain regions injured. Today, once a brain is damaged, its functions remain on a slippery slope 'slippery slope' Medical ethics An ethical continuum or 'slope,' the impact of which has been incompletely explored, and which itself raises moral questions that are even more on the ethical 'edge' than the original issue for life." Dr. David Durham has treated thousands of TBI victims, including many military veterans. He is the former director of the Neuroscience Research Institute, a former medical consultant to the Fox Ten O'clock News in Roanoke, Virginia Roanoke is an independent city located in the Commonwealth of Virginia. The city of Roanoke is adjacent to the city of Salem and the town of Vinton and is otherwise surrounded by, but politically separate from, Roanoke County. , and documentary filmmaker in Iraq. He currently is Managing partner and Director of Neuropsychiatry neuropsychiatry /neu·ro·psy·chi·a·try/ (noor?o-si-ki´ah-tre) the combined specialties of neurology and psychiatry. neu·ro·psy·chi·a·try n. and Neurocognitive Regeneration at the Mosaic Neuroscience Group based in Santa Fe New Mexico, with offices in Roswell as well as New York City. Dr. Durham receives no compensation from pharmaceutical companies. He served with the US Army in the early 1990s and played football in college. Dr. Dave Durham is available for TV, radio and print commentary on the newest treatments in development for TBI and how athletes can recognize early signs of TBI. |
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