Researchers Study Football Concussions
By STEVE
HERMAN
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Most serious head injuries in college football
are never reported to team trainers or coaches because the players
don't think their symptoms are severe enough to indicate a concussion,
according to a new Indiana State University study.
That lack of knowledge could be putting athletes at risk for
more severe injury, or even death, researchers say.
``When your head is messed up, you may not know it yourself,''
said JoEllen Sefton, a doctoral fellow in sports medicine who
surveyed 457 players, 38 coaches and eight trainers from eight
NCAA Division I-A, I-AA and II colleges.
Coaches, players, athletic administrators and medical personnel
have long known the risks of injury to the brain. But Sefton's
2002 survey, to be presented Saturday at the National Athletic
Trainers Association meeting in Baltimore, indicates nearly three
of every four concussions go unreported.
A concussion is a blow to the head that jostles the brain and
can cause brain swelling, blood vessel damage and even death.
Symptoms can include headache, confusion, loss of consciousness
and nausea.
A study funded in part by the NCAA and published last November
by the Journal of the American Medical Association found college
players who suffer concussions are more prone to another one,
especially if they return to the field too soon. They also become
slower to recover from blows to the head, researchers said.
``There's a condition called second impact syndrome,'' said
Mitchell Cordova, chairman of the athletic training department
at Indiana State. ``An athlete takes a subsequent hit that may
be less severe than the first hit but receives a greater injury
because the symptoms from the initial incident are not completely
resolved.''
Several pro football players have ended their careers early
after suffering multiple concussions, including quarterbacks
Troy Aikman of the Dallas Cowboys and Steve Young of the San
Francisco 49ers..
The Indiana State study, published in the April-June issue of
the Journal of Athletic Training, gave players a list of symptoms
and asked them to identify which were associated with concussions
and which were not. It asked players how many of those symptoms
they had experienced, and how often they had reported them, after
a hit in the head.
Sefton said those surveyed suffered symptoms consistent with
concussion 391 times - 21 percent of them more than once. But
72 percent of the symptoms were not reported, primarily because
the athlete did not think the injury was serious, she said.
The study also indicated that many players had misconceptions
about what signals a concussion.
For example, some players mistakenly thought they could not
have suffered a concussion because they did not have a headache.
``If they had trouble sleeping at night or were depressed or
had emotional outbursts - all symptoms of concussion - if they
didn't know those were symptoms, they might not connect that
with the hit in the head they had that day,'' Sefton said.
She said the more athletes know about concussions, the more
likely they are to report them.
``We need to develop an education program for athletes for head
injuries,'' she said. ``We have them for drug abuse, we have
them for nutrition and eating disorders, for smoking, but we
don't have anything for head injuries.''