PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Case report: former football player’s cognitive symptoms improved after study revealed alternative diagnosis and treatment

After receiving treatment for hydrocephalus, the former professional athlete regained cognitive functioning, illustrating the importance of taking a comprehensive approach when addressing health concerns among athletes

2023-05-05
(Press-News.org) Football players who have had repetitive head trauma and concussion are at heightened risk for chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), an irreversible condition that leads to dementia. But not every case of cognitive decline means CTE, as illustrated by a new case study published by researchers from Mass General Brigham in Current Sports Medicine Reports.

In the publication, Adam Tenforde, MD, a physician in Mass General Brigham’s Sports medicine program and medical director of the Spaulding National Running Center, co-authored a study that described the case of a 54-year-old former professional football player who was suffering from life-altering cognitive, behavioral and personality changes when he enrolled in the Harvard Football Players Health Study. As part of the study, which comprehensively assesses each participants’ health over the course of a three-day study visit, the participant received a brain MRI. The MRI revealed signs of hydrocephalus—swelling in the brain that can be treated and reversed. After receiving treatment, the participant experienced improvements in mood and cognition.

“We see with this case report that it’s important to always be curious as to why an individual experiences a change in function,” said Tenforde. “There can be unconscious bias in how we approach former and current athletes, and those biases can affect care. Providers might assume a decline in cognition is indicative of a diagnosis or condition that is untreatable. But one of the key findings from our work on this ongoing study is that when we take a more comprehensive approach, we may find alternative explanations and a treatable diagnosis.”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UCF scientist uncovers roots of antibiotic resistance

2023-05-05
By Suhtling Wong | May 1, 2023 11:19 am Bacteria naturally adapt to various environmental stimuli and as they mutate, these changes can make them resistant to drugs that would kill or slow their growth. In a recent article published in PLoS Genetics, UCF College of Medicine microbiologist Dr. Salvador Almagro-Moreno uncovers the evolutionary origins of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in bacteria. His studies on the bacterium that causes ...

Archaea in a warming climate become less diverse, more predictable

Archaea in a warming climate become less diverse, more predictable
2023-05-05
Led by Jizhong Zhou, Ph.D., the director of the Institute for Environmental Genomics at the University of Oklahoma, an international research team conducted a long term experiment that found that climate warming reduced the diversity of and significantly altered the community structure of soil archaea. Their findings are published in the journal Nature Climate Change. At the microbiological level, life can be described as belonging to one of three kingdoms – how species are described in relation to one another. Eukarya contains complex organisms like animals and ...

Helping health care providers support Black breastfeeding families

2023-05-05
PHILADELPHIA (May 5, 2023) - Despite breastfeeding being recommended for at least two years, only 36 percent of all infants are still breastfed at their first birthday. Black/African American mothers are least likely to initiate breastfeeding with initiation rates of only 74 percent compared to 90 percent of Asian mothers with a national average of 84 percent. Given the disparities in breastfeeding initiation, there are likely to be equivalent disparities in breastfeeding duration. New research from the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing (Penn Nursing) published in the journal Breastfeeding ...

Jefferson Lab hosts International Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics Conference

Jefferson Lab hosts International Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics Conference
2023-05-05
NEWPORT NEWS, VA – Experts in high-performance computing and data management are gathering in Norfolk next week for the 26th International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP2023). Held approximately every 18 months, this high-impact conference will be held at the Norfolk Marriott Waterside in Norfolk, Va., May 8-12. CHEP2023 is hosted by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility in nearby Newport News, Va. This is the first in-person CHEP conference to be held since 2019. Science is driven by data. As research has progressed, so has the sheer volume of scientific data. The CHEP2023 conference ...

Exciton fission – one photon in, two electrons out

Exciton fission – one photon in, two electrons out
2023-05-05
”When pentacene is excited by light, the electrons in the material rapidly react,” explains Prof. Ralph Ernstorfer, a senior author of the study. “It was an open and very disputed question whether a photon excites two electrons directly or initially one electron, which subsequently shares its energy with another electron.” To unravel this mystery the researchers used time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, a cutting-edge technique to observe the dynamics of electrons on the femtosecond time scale, which is a billionth of a ...

Study: ChemoID platform-predicted treatments lead to longer survival for glioblastoma patients

Study: ChemoID platform-predicted treatments lead to longer survival for glioblastoma patients
2023-05-05
New multi-institutional phase 3 clinical trial data published May 2 in Cell Reports Medicine found that a cancer stem cell test can accurately decide more effective treatments and lead to increased survival for patients with glioblastoma, a deadly brain tumor. The University of Cincinnati’s Soma Sengupta, MD, PhD, a co-first author of the research and a University of Cincinnati Cancer Center physician-researcher, said the research focused on patients whose glioblastoma had returned after initial treatment.  The trial tested the effectiveness ...

Best path to fair living wage for global supply chain workers may take an indirect route new research suggests

2023-05-05
Toronto - Want to make a positive difference in the wage conditions of developing country factory workers churning out products for multinational firms? Paying them more seems an obvious first step. But research looking at the experience of clothing retailer H&M Group suggests a less direct approach — by intervening at the management practice level — can empower workers and significantly raise wages in sustainable ways, multiplying the impact of the company’s investment many times over. In 2013, following activist pressure for reform, H&M went to its suppliers and asked them to voluntarily implement ...

An online adaptive model for streaming anomaly detection based on human-machine cooperation

An online adaptive model for streaming anomaly detection based on human-machine cooperation
2023-05-05
Anomaly detectors are used to distinguish differences between normal and abnormal data, which are usually implemented by evaluating and ranking the anomaly scores of each instance. A static unsupervised streaming anomaly detector is difficult to dynamically adjust anomaly score calculation. To solve the problem, a research team led by Prof. Zhiwen Yu published their new research on 15 April 2023 in Frontiers of Computer Science co-published by Higher Education Press and Springer Nature. The team proposed a human-machine interactive streaming anomaly detection method, named ISPForest, which can ...

How PCOS can affect the health of future generations of men

How PCOS can affect the health of future generations of men
2023-05-05
Sons of women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) are three times more likely to develop obesity, according to a study published in Cell Reports Medicine. According to the researchers from Karolinska Institutet the findings highlight a previously unknown risk of passing PCOS-related health problems across generations through the male side of a family. PCOS is caused by the ovaries producing too much of the sex hormone testosterone. The disease affects around 15 per cent of women of childbearing age worldwide and is a condition that ...

Quitting smoking early linked with improved survival rates for people diagnosed with lung cancer

2023-05-05
Embargoed for release: Friday, May 5, 2023, 11:00 AM ET Key points: Among those diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer—the most common form of lung cancer—current smokers had 68% higher mortality and former smokers had 26% higher mortality compared to never smokers The longer a patient had gone without smoking pre-diagnosis, the more improved their odds of survival were The study is one of few to examine mortality not just among current and never smokers, but also among former smokers—enabling more robust findings about the impacts ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Poll: Amid multi-state measles outbreak, 79% of Americans support routine childhood vaccine requirements

Artificial intelligence in miniature format for small devices

Early blood-thinning treatment safe and effective for stroke patients

New gene therapy delivery device could let hospitals create personalized nanomedicines on-demand

Membrane or metabolism, which came first?

Jackpot! Gold from e-waste opens a rich vein for miners and the environment

EPFL scientists build first self-illuminating biosensor

Oxford scientists develop new technique for capturing ultra-intense laser pulses in a single shot

Inflammatory cells remain in the blood after treatment of severe asthma

New insights into seasonal shifts in sleep

Estimating microbial biomass from air-dried soils: A safer, scalable approach

AI in healthcare needs patient-centred regulation to avoid discrimination – new commentary

A good soak in a hot tub might beat a sauna for health benefits

Surgery plus speech therapy linked to improved language after stroke

GP performance pay fails to drive lasting changes in quality of care

Focusing on weight loss alone for obesity may do more harm than good

In sub-Saharan Africa, 1 in 6 cancer medications found to be defective

Newborns require better care to improve survival and long-term health

EMBARGOED: New study shows almost half of hospital patients in Malawi and Tanzania have multiple health conditions

People with symptoms of chronic lung disease in Kenya face ‘catastrophic’ health costs

Sylvester Cancer Tip Sheet - June 2025

UC Davis and Proteus Space to launch first-ever dynamic digital twin into space

Olympians' hearts in focus: groundbreaking study reveals elite rowers' surprising AFib risk

Common medicine for autoimmune diseases works on giant cell arteritis

Your neighborhood may be tied to risk of inflammation, dementia biomarkers

AAN issues position statement on possible therapies for neurological conditions

Liver organoid breakthrough: Generating organ-specific blood vessels

LRA awards 2025 Lupus Insight Prize to Dr. Deepak Rao for uncovering key drivers of immune imbalance in lupus

Terasaki Institute’s Dr. Yangzhi Zhu recognized as 2024 Biosensors Young Investigator Award Recipient

NAU researchers launch open-source robotic exoskeleton to help people walk

[Press-News.org] Case report: former football player’s cognitive symptoms improved after study revealed alternative diagnosis and treatment
After receiving treatment for hydrocephalus, the former professional athlete regained cognitive functioning, illustrating the importance of taking a comprehensive approach when addressing health concerns among athletes