The ongoing story of hockey players and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) took another step forward with the publishing of the largest-ever study on the brains of male hockey players – a study ...
The likelihood of a CTE diagnosis was significantly higher in players with depression or a combination of depression and anxiety, a recent study found. Photo by Terry Schmitt/UPI Former pro football ...
Researchers at Boston University found CTE in 92 percent of former NFL players who were analyzed, the institution said in an update of its study. The Boston University CTE Center studied the brains of ...
A new Boston University CTE Center brain bank study has found that more than 40% of contact and collision sport athletes who died young had CTE. The BU Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) Center ...
A study conducted by the Boston University CTE Center determined more than 40 percent of youth, high school and college contact sport athletes who suffered repetitive head trauma and died before the ...
A new study out of BU’s CTE Center found an increased risk of chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, in male hockey players the longer they played the game. The neurodegenerative disease has been ...
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – The thought has always been the more concussions an athlete suffered, the more likely they would be diagnosed with Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, better known as CTE. Now, a ...
An image provided by Boston University researchers shows the effects of chronic traumatic encephalopathy on a normal brain (L) and an affected one. File Photo by Boston University Center for the Study ...
The largest-ever study of CTE has found a new link between playing contact sports, CTE, and developing Parkinson’s disease-like symptoms. The Boston University study of 481 dead athletes reveals that ...
BOSTON -- Dozens of widows and other caregivers for former NFL players diagnosed with CTE say a published study is insulting and dismissive of their experience living with the degenerative brain ...
SAN FRANCISCO -- Dr. Gil Rabinovici, a leading neurologist at UC San Francisco, has examined "thousands, if not 10s of thousands" human brains. On a recent day in his ground-floor Mission Bay office, ...