Thursday, September 06, 2012

Football players more likely to develop neurodegenerative disease, study finds


Football players more likely to develop neurodegenerative disease, study findsTwo Chicago Bears players collide on a tackle against the Green Bay Packers in 2011. (CNN) -- Just hours before the 2012 NFL season kicks off, a new study suggests that professional football players are three times more likely to have neurodegenerative diseases than the general population.

When researchers specifically looked at Alzheimer's disease and ALS -- amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease -- that risk increased to four times greater than the rest of us.
The study, published Wednesday in the medical journal Neurology, surveyed nearly 3,500 retired NFL players who were in the league between 1959 and 1988.
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, a division of the Centers for Disease Control, had been following this group of players since the early '90s, when the NFL asked the institute to evaluate them for their risk of cardiovascular disease.
This time, the authors decided to look at the neurological outcomes of the players by specifically evaluating the autopsies of 334 players.

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