Concussion Concerns Extend To Younger Players
For the Ohio State community, Thanksgiving weekend ended in tragedy when 22-year-old football player Kosta Karageorge
was found dead of apparent suicide. Karageorge, who had been missing since Nov. 26, was found on Nov. 30 in a dumpster near the school's campus in Columbus, along with a gun and what police said appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
According to the
Washington Post, Karageorge's mother told police that her son had suffered from several concussions. The
Columbus Dispatch reported that a few days before his body was found, Karageorge had texted his mother, saying, "I am sorry if I am an embarrassment but these concussions have my head all [messed] up.”
This week, an Ohio coroner
ordered a special examination of Karageorge's brain to look for signs of traumatic brain injury.
The national conversation around traumatic brain injury in football -- concussions, but also
chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a degenerative brain disease that has been linked to repeated head traumas -- is now expanding beyond retired and longtime NFL players to include student athletes......
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/1...052&ir=College