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8 projects receive grants from NFL for concussion research

Minnesota Vikings quarterback Christian Ponder (7) is sacked by Chicago Bears defensive end Shea McClellin, right, and strong safety Craig Steltz, left.
Minnesota Vikings quarterback Christian Ponder (7) is sacked by Chicago Bears defensive end Shea McClellin, right, and strong safety Craig Steltz, left. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

NEW YORK – The National Institutes of Health, with partial funding by the NFL, has chosen eight projects to receive support in researching concussions.

Two $6 million grants will be given to a co-operative partnership focused on long-term changes in the brain years after a head injury or after multiple concussions. The partnership includes the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS); the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD); and multiple academic medical centres.

The NIH also will provide just over $2 million for start-ups of sports-releated concussion projects. If the early results are encouraging, they may become the basis of more comprehensive projects.

READ MORE: Even without concussion, head injuries still affect learning, memory, study warns

The NIH institutes responsible for managing these grants are NINDS, NICHD, and the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD).

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“We need to be able to predict which patterns of injury are rapidly reversible and which are not,” Story Landis, director of NINDS, said in a statement. “This program will help researchers get closer to answering some of the important questions about concussion for our youth who play sports and their parents.”

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The NFL did not have a role in which organizations received the grants. Those decisions were made by the NIH.

READ MORE: Panel finds helmets, mouth guards don’t prevent concussions

“We are optimistic that these research projects will help advance the understanding of the complex issues involving traumatic brain injury,” said Jeff Miller, the NFL senior vice-president of health and safety policy.

The co-operative awards bring together two teams of independent scientists to study and compare the brains of donors who were at high or low risk for developing long-term effects of traumatic brain injury. Ten neuropathologists from eight universities will meet to develop standards for diagnosis.

READ MORE: NFL Players’ Association hands Harvard $100 million to study injury

Four teams will correlate brain scans with changes in brain tissue, which could lead to using such advanced brain imaging techniques to diagnose chronic effects of traumatic brain injury in people who are still alive.

The NIH also will develop a registry for enrolling individuals with a history of such brain injuries who are interested in donating brain and spinal cord tissue for study after their death.

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READ MORE: Bodychecking rules don’t help limit concussions in the NHL, Canadian research suggests

AP NFL website: http://www.pro32.ap.org

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