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Purdue Professor elected to city council

West Lafayette Mayor John Dennis went out on a limb a week ago, crossing party boundaries to endorse a pair of city council candidates who weren’t Republicans.

His point: “I’m all about the team, man. I want great people who are all about the team, too.”

Did Dennis, running uncontested for his third four-year term as mayor, get what he wanted after Tuesday’s city council election?

“More or less, it looks like it,” Dennis said Tuesday night. “I look at the names up there and see a lot of people who know how to work together.”

Incumbents who ran again for West Lafayette City Council all won: Democrats Nick DeBoer, Peter Bunder and Gerald Thomas; and Republicans Gerry Keen and Steve Dietrich. The newcomers to the council will include: Democrats Larry Leverenz and David Sanders; and Republicans Norris Wang and Aseem Jha.

Those results won’t be certified until Nov. 13. Election officials still have to contact 95 West Lafayette voters who were given incorrect ballots in early voting to give them a chance to vote in the proper city council district. County Clerk Christa Coffey said she couldn’t be sure Tuesday night if there were enough votes in any of the districts to swing the results. She said she expected to know that Wednesday.

After a second term that included the historic annexation of Purdue University, Dennis ran again to keep pressing on the State Street Master Plan, a joint project with Purdue that is estimated to run between $60 million and $100 million, the development of what’s he’s called a new downtown and finding a home for city hall. Dennis’ endorsement of Thomas in the at-large race and Donnie Spencer, an independent who lost in to Jha in a three-way race in the student-heavy District 3, was still setting a tone for those who won Tuesday.

“I think very much I fit into the mix, from my point of view,” said Leverenz, a Purdue professor and athletic trainer at Purdue, who beat Republican Tom Andrew in District 4. “I support what the city is doing in general — on development along the U.S. 231 corridor, on State Street, on many things. … We might differ a little on where to put a new city hall, but that’s where the council can have a discussion.”

The city’s move from a third class city to a second class city meant a restructuring of city government, including increasing the size of the city council — from seven members to nine — with an additional district and an additional at-large member.

Sanders, a biology professor at Purdue, fill the at-large seat.

“I had a talk with John and told him I’m not running against John Dennis,” Sanders said. “If you know me, I do see myself as trying to restrain Mitch Daniels at Purdue. You know that, Mitch Daniels knows that. I make no secret about that. But that’s not how I feel about John Dennis.”

The city council drew District 3 so it centered on a cluster of Purdue residence halls.

On Tuesday, those campaigning for the three candidates told about the struggle to find votes in a district where many potential voters are freshman or sophomores and hadn’t bothered to update their voter registration information in time for an off-year municipal election.

“We’re getting a lot of, ‘I’m not registered,’” said Kristin Jones, who was campaigning outside the Purdue Memorial Union for her daughter, Democrat Joelle Jones, Tuesday afternoon. She said the campaign had registered more than 600 people in the district in time for the city election.

Around the way, a stack of pizza boxes piled up behind Spencer, who set up a table outside the Stewart Center on Tuesday. Beside a sign touting his campaign, Spencer said he was giving away slices of pizza to anyone who wanted one.

“If they ask, ‘What’s going on?’, I’m telling them about the election and where they can vote,” Spencer said. “A lot are asking. So that’s good.”

Asked about the legality of the tactic, Coffey said that as long as Spencer was outside the 50-foot “chute” outside the polling place, “it is not an issue for the election process unless he is giving the pizza in return for votes.”

In the end, Jha won.

“Right off the bat, I’m satisfied the voters put their faith in me,” Jha said. “I want to thank my opponents. It was actually great for me, getting out the vote, even if though it was a huge time commitment.”

As for not getting the mayor’s endorsement, even though they are both Republicans?

“I told my team to worry about what we could do, not what someone else said we could do,” Jha said. “I feel I’m ready.”

 

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:
http://www.jconline.com/story/news/2015/11/03/wl-mayor-gets-his-team-more-less/75087820/

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Michigan allows long hours of prep football hitting

On a late August night in Chelsea, there were two football scores of note as visiting Northview High School collided with Chelsea High. There was the final tally, which after the usual assortment of helmet-smacking hits stood at: Chelsea 27, Northview 14.

But along the sideline, Jesse Brinks, the athletic trainer for Northview, a school north of Grand Rapids, was focused on a second set of numbers. Brinks handed an iPad to a Northview defensive back who just absorbed a hard blow while making a tackle. The player was asked to track a series of single-digit numbers on the screen. His score would give Brinks a good idea if the boy had a concussion.

In this case, he passed – and after clearing other tests, the player returned to the game in the second half.

Brinks guessed he’s used the test about 10 times this season, confirming a concussion in one case for a cheerleader who took an elbow to the head as she spotted for another cheerleader. In two other cases, it helped confirm concussions in football practice. “It’s a great tool for us,” Brinks said.

Amid growing fears nationally about the risks and long-term impact of concussions in sports, Northview’s sideline protocol is part of an ambitious pilot program in Michigan launched in August for 10,000 athletes in 70 public and private high schools.

According to the Michigan High School Athletic Association, it is the first of its kind in the nation. The association contends that Michigan is also first to require member schools to record suspected concussions in practice and in games at middle and high schools across the state.

“We’re trying to be on the front line, to make sure we’re doing everything we can to make sure our kids are safe,” said Northview athletic director Jerry Klekotka.

“I think it’s definitely a good direction to go. The safety of the players has to be number 1.” – Nate Moore, coach of Ohio football powerhouse Massillon Washington High School, on Ohio’s move to limit full-contact practice time.

That may be. But while Michigan appears to be ahead of the curve in how closely it tracks concussions, Bridge found that Michigan is behind many other states in limiting time young players can engage in full-contact practices during the week. Michigan, for instance, allows six times as much full-contact football practice each week as in the neighboring states of Wisconsin and Ohio.

These and many other states are sharply limiting full-contact scrimmaging in the face of research showing the routine, daily collisions in sports such as football or soccer can alter the brains of athletes, even when players are not specifically diagnosed with a concussion. Repeated, sub-concussive blows from full-contact scrimmages and games can have a significant impact over time. Other research has found that the risk of brain trauma to young players can commence well before high school.

“Common sense tells you that bopping your head all the time for a number of years is not going to be a good thing,” said Larry Levenerz, a Purdue University clinical professor of health and kinesiology and member of the school’s Purdue Neurotrauma Group, which has studied the effects of football on cognition since 2009.

More attention, more warnings

Northview High School athletic trainer Jesse Brinks tests athletes for concussion with a specialized iPad program. (Photo courtesy Northview High School).

Warnings over the risks of football have been building by years, as events like the 2012 suicide of ex-NFL linebacker Junior Seau cast the issue into sharp national focus. An autopsy found that Seau suffered from chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, a progressive degenerative disease linked to repetitive brain trauma, often marked by depression and cognitive deterioration. CTE, which can only be detected by examining the brain after death, has been found in dozens of former NFL players.

In September, researchers at the Department of Veterans Affairs and Boston University found that 87 of 91 deceased NFL players whose brains were tested had evidence of CTE (That percentage is likely skewed since many of the players suspected they had CTE and asked that their brains be tested after they died).

But the disease is not limited to 30-something NFL veterans.

The same year Seau died, Joseph Chernach, who had played football since he was a young boy and became an Upper Peninsula high school football star, killed himself at age 25. An autopsy found significant evidence of CTE and brain damage. His mother, Debra Pyka, said he never had a confirmed concussion.

Mounting evidence of the dangers of repeated head contact has caused state bodies that regulate high school sports to reconsider how much contact should be permitted in practice. The era of hours-long, full-contact practices throughout the week appears to be on the wane, even in football factory states such as Ohio.

In July, the Ohio High School Athletic Association adopted guidelines aimed at curtailing hits during practice. It now limits schools to no more than two 30-minute, full-contact football practices a week. The Ohio change was driven by research showing that 58 percent of concussions among high school and college football players occurred in practice, compared with 42 percent in games.

More coverage: From high school football star to ‘a completely different person’

Nate Moore, coach of perennial Ohio football powerhouse Massillon High School, told Bridge he considers the movement to curb full-contact at practices a positive step.

“I think it’s definitely a good direction to go. The safety of the players has to be number 1,” Moore said.

Moore added that he doesn’t believe the restrictions will limit his ability to prepare his team to play its best football. “I don’t feel it’s negative at all,” he said. “The days of hammering ourselves in two-a-days (practices) in the summer are done.”

Wisconsin also limits full-contact practice to 60 minutes a week, after the first three weeks of practice and games. Other states, including Alabama, Iowa, Kansas, Georgia, Texas, California and Tennessee limit practice contact to 90 minutes a week. In California, that limit was imposed not by a high school athletic association, but by the state legislature, and was then signed into law last year by Gov. Jerry Brown.

According the National Federation of State High School Associations, there is evidencethese limits “resulted in a statistically significant decrease in concussion rates during practices.”

More hitting in Michigan

By contrast, Michigan allows two full-contact practices a week after the first game of the football season – with a maximum length of three hours per practice, for a total of six hours a week of hitting. That’s six times what Ohio and Wisconsin allow.

Even that six-hour restriction, adopted in 2014, met resistance from some old-school Michigan coaches.

Tom Mach, a 10-time state champion and for 27 years head coach at Detroit Catholic Central, was quoted at the time saying the six-hour limit would make it harder to teach proper tackling techniques.

“When they get into the game, it has to be an automatic thing,” he said. “The more time we take away from being able to teach that (in live game speed), the worse results we’re going to get.”

The recent focus on concussions and player safety seems to be giving some parents and players second thoughts about playing tackle football. The number of participants in Michigan high school football has declined seven straight years. It’s also changing the way football is being taught, with coaches from youth leagues to the NFL focusing on safer tackling techniques that cut down on helmet-to-helmet contact.

Purdue University kinesiology professor Larry Leverenz: “Common sense tells you that bopping your head all the time for a number of years is not going to be a good thing.” (Photo courtesy Purdue University).

Other sports too are paying attention. Safety advocates in sports like soccer have begun to question whether young players should be allowed to “head” the ball, a routine skill taught to players but one that is also linked to concussions.

But no sport features as many opportunities to knock heads as football.

Hundreds of blows

The 2012 Purdue University study, which tracked a couple dozen high school football players over the course of two seasons, found that players logged anywhere from 200 to1,800 hits to the head over the course of a season. MRI tests found that 17 players – who wore special helmets equipped with sensors – had measurable changes to their brain, with the magnitude of change to brain activity corresponded with the number of hits the player took. None of the players logged having a concussion.

Leverenz, of Purdue, said it’s unclear at what point the cognitive changes documented in these studies will lead to serious impairment. He said the group’s research is finding that the football players’ brains – though changed – can essentially rewire themselves, finding new neural tracks, so that outward cognitive functioning seems the same. “At what point,” he asked, “do enough of these (neural) tracks get damaged?”

John E. “Jack” Roberts, the executive director of MHSAA, which has a voluntary membership of over 1,500 public and private middle and high schools in the state, said he believes most Michigan schools conduct full-contact football practices that are considerably shorter than the two three-hour practice maximums allowed.

But given the steps taken by other states to more strictly limit full-contact practice, Roberts acknowledged to Bridge that it’s an issue his organization should reconsider. That decision would be made by its 19-member governing board, which is next scheduled to meet in December.

“We don’t want to be behind that curve,” Roberts said. “Now we can go back and revisit this to see if there is some tweaking we should do.”

In the meantime, research on head trauma in sports is finding that the risk of injury can begin as young as age 5, the minimum age to participate in Pop Warner youth football:

A 2013 study of football players ages 9 to 12 in the Annals of Biomedical Engineering found that the players averaged 240 high-magnitude hits in the course of a season between practice and games.

Another study in the Journal of the American Medical Association Pediatrics found that one-in-30 football players ages 5 to 14 will sustain one concussion per season.

Other sports taking notice

Studies of young soccer players are detecting brain changes from the repetitive heading of the soccer ball, regardless of whether concussions were reported. A 2013 Texas medical study of 24 teenage girls found indications of “cognitive dysfunctions” in half of them from heading the ball, compared with none recorded among 12 non-soccer players.

Such findings prompted a group of World Cup soccer stars in 2014 to call for a ban on heading the ball until age 14.

In May 2014, a Pennsylvania middle school decided to ban heading in middle school soccer in the 2015 season, perhaps the first school in nation to do so.

Roberts of the MHSAA said he has been pushing member schools and coaches to consider a similar ban on heading in middle-school soccer, perhaps junior varsity as well ‒ thus far to no avail.

“The purists think that’s the end of soccer,” Roberts said.

Given the nature of football, it’s no surprise the sport leads the ways in the risks posed by concussion. But it’s not alone among high school sports.

According to a report by the American Journal of Sports Medicine, football had an average rate of 64 concussions per athlete per 100,000 games or practices in 2008 through 2010.That was followed by ice hockey, at 54 per 100,000, boys’ lacrosse at 40, girls’ lacrosse at 35 and girls’ soccer at 34.

But with some 40,000 players, far more than any other high school sport in Michigan, football leads the way in concussions. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control estimates there are more than 25,000emergency room visits a year for traumatic brain injury among football players under age 19, second only to bicycling among all sports and recreational activities as a cause of head trauma.

The sweet science

To be sure, it’s not as if sports like football and soccer suddenly became dangerous.

Boxing had been known to cause what is now known as CTE since the 1920s, an era when ex-fighters were commonly described as “punch drunk.”

But in 2005, a forensic neuropathologist published findings on his examination of the brain of former Pittsburgh Steeler linebacker Mike Webster, who died in 2002 with severe dementia. He concluded Webster had CTE ‒ the first time it was confirmed in an NFL player.

A 2015 Boston University study of former NFL players concluded that the risks to cognitive functioning rise the longer an individual plays football. Players who began football before age 12, had “greater later-life cognitive impairment” as measured by a battery of cognitive tests, the study found.

By then, states, including Michigan, were taking notice.

In October 2012, Gov. Rick Snyder signed legislation that requires coaches to remove any youth athlete suspected of a concussion. Players removed cannot return to competition without written clearance from a health care professional. It is similar to legislationpassed by all 50 states since 2007.

It’s the hope of the MHSAA pilot study to take diagnosis of concussion to a more precise level.

Participating schools use one of two devices to gauge concussion, taking baseline cognitive results from before the season begins to compare with results in practice or competition. It is to be used for two sports each season for both boys’ and girls’ sports, ranging from football to hockey to soccer to volleyball – and yes, cheerleading.

The system used by Northview High School, known as the King-Devick test, compares the baseline ability of an athlete to rapidly repeat single-digit numbers on a computer screen to results recorded after a suspected concussion. The test detects impaired rapid eye movement, attention and concentration that are symptoms of concussion.

Other schools are employing a program called XLNTbrain Sport, which assesses an athlete’s balance and cognition using a smartphone or tablet, comparing the result in competition or practice with baseline scores.

Giving parents pause

In the meantime, it may be the concussion issue is eroding participation in high school football.

According to the MHSAA, the number participants in 11-player football fell 15 percent in Michigan between 2007 and 2014, with declines each of the last 8 years. That exceeds an 11 percent decline in boys attending MHSAA-member schools over that period.

Despite the parade of scary headlines, Northview athletic director Klekotka said he believes recent changes in the way coaches teach football fundamentals is making a positive difference. Northview is in line with many other schools in putting greater focus on tackling without using the crown of the helmet to bring a player down.

In 2012, the NFL endorsed this approach, called Heads Up Football, geared to encourage coaches from youth through high school to teach this technique. Michigan State University football coach Mark Dantonio has even begun teaching players rugby tackling techniques in an effort to reduce the percentage of head-first strikes.

“I think football is safer than it has ever been,” Klekotka said.

Brinks, the trainer, has twin 5-year-old boys, Samuel and Mason, who he says are just becoming aware what the sport of football is about. Though he’s seen his share of concussions, Brinks said he won’t stand in their way if they want to strap on a helmet in a few years.

Brinks still views the sport as relatively safe, and one that builds important qualities of teamwork and leadership.

“I do think the positive life lessons learned through competing in football outweigh the negative consequences. If they want to play football,” he said, “I would support that.”

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:
http://bridgemi.com/2015/10/despite-concussion-fears-michigan-allows-long-hours-of-prep-football-hitting/

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‘Deviant brain metabolism’ found in high school football players

New research into the effects of repeated head impacts on high school football players has shown changes in brain chemistry and metabolism even in players who have not been diagnosed with concussions and suggest the brain may not fully heal during the offseason.

Researchers used a medical-imaging technique called proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H MRS) to study the brains of 25 high school football players and those of non-contact-sports controls before, during and after the regular season.

“We are seeing damage not just to neurons, but also to the vasculature and glial cells in the brain,” said Eric Nauman, a professor of mechanical engineering, basic medical sciences and biomedical engineering. “I was particularly disturbed that when you get to the offseason — we are looking somewhere between two and five months after the season has ended — the majority of players are still showing that they had not fully recovered.”

Findings, which suggest the cumulative effects of injuries pose potential health dangers for players not diagnosed with concussion, are detailed in five research papers published in May in the journal Developmental Neuropsychology.

The 1H MRS data provide details about the blood flow, metabolism, and chemistry of neurons and glial cells important for brain function. The data also revealed a “hypermetabolic response” in the brains of football players during the preseason, as though trying to heal connections impaired from the previous season.

“We found that in the preseason for the football players in our study, one part of the brain would be associating with about 100 other regions, which is much higher than the controls,” said Thomas Talavage, a professor of electrical and computer engineering and biomedical engineering and co-director of the Purdue MRI Facility. “The brain is pretty amazing at covering up a lot of changes. Some of these kids have no outward symptoms, but we can see their brains have rewired themselves to skip around the parts that are affected.”

One of the research papers, in work led by former doctoral student Victoria N. Poole, showed that knowing a player’s history of specific types of hits to the head makes it possible to accurately predict “deviant brain metabolism.” Findings suggest that sub-concussive blows can produce biochemical changes and potentially lead to neurological problems, showing a correlation between players taking the heaviest hits and brain chemistry changes. Data showed that the neurons in the motor cortex region in the brains of football players produced about 50 percent less of the neurotransmitter glutamine compared to controls.

“We are finding that the more hits you take the more you change your brain chemistry, the more you change your brain’s ability to move blood to the right locations,” Nauman said.

To help prevent concussions, sensors might be integrated into helmets to track hits to the head and to monitor how well the helmet is absorbing the blows.

“Intervention is a big issue,” said Larry Leverenz, clinical professor in the Department of Health and Kinesiology, and an expert in athletic training. “We’d like to get to the point where, now that we know we can observe with imaging how the brain changes with exposure, we can intervene to change the hardware, change the helmets, change techniques and training regimens.”

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:
http://www.purdueexponent.org/article_4e9d9e8e-cab6-58d8-8e52-2339d5d54673.html#.Vdc11b88W6I.twitter

LINK TO THE RESEARCH REVIEWED ABOVE:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25649774