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    FACEBOOK

    Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

    While We update and build a new site, please go to www.facebook.com/thebiri or www.twitter.com/protectthebrain for the latest updates and news. If you are trying to contact someone at BIRI please visit those pages or email our administrator at BIRIGW@gmail.com . Thank you.

    Dr. Julian Bailes Featured on tonights Larry King Live

    Friday, September 17th, 2010

    Does the brain have a mind of its own? It might explain why we say– and do– things we know we shouldn’t! Larry talks to Dr. Julian Bailes to find out.

    Secrets of Your Mind: Why We Do What We Do

    Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

    “Nightline Prime,” a new primetime series, premieres Thursday, Aug. 19, with the first of four installments of “Secrets of Your Mind: Why We Do What We Do.”

    The series explores the mystery and the science of the brain through a range of extraordinary case studies. Each installment focuses on a different research area, including love’s impact on the brain, violence and the brain, medical emergencies involving the brain, and food and the brain.

    Experts warn about repeated brain blows in football

    Thursday, July 8th, 2010

    The brain of the late Cincinnati Bengals pass receiver Chris Henry contained so many signs of chronic disease — sludge, tangles and threads associated with late-in-life dementia or Alzheimer’s — that it shows a football player can sustain life-altering head trauma without ever being diagnosed with a concussion.
    Click to read more. courtesy of post-gazette.com

    CTE Becoming Increasingly Common In Retirees

    Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

    If the disturbing findings during the autopsy of former West Virginia and Cincinnati Bengals receiver Chris Henry tell us one thing, it’s that the prevention of brain injuries among athletes in contact sports still has a way to go.
    Click to read full story courtesy of the Wheeling News Register.

    Young player had brain damage more often seen in NFL veterans

    Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

    Doctors found evidence of brain damage, called chronic traumatic encephalopathy, that has been observed in retired players who’ve had many concussions. Unlike those older players, Henry was 26 when he died.
    Click to read full story courtesy of CNN.com

    What Chris Henry’s brain is telling us

    Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

    This is rapidly shaping up as a public health crisis among a decent-sized segment of the population, and Henry is now its seminal figure. Here’s why: The Henry findings indicate the crisis extends not only to longtime NFL players but to an unimaginable amount of young men as well.
    Click to read Full story courtesy of [...]

    Howard: Sound The Alarm

    Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

    Nobody wants to hear what doctors discovered about the damage to the late Chris Henry’s brain, but we all need to listen and reconsider the danger in the game of football, Johnette Howard writes. Story

    Researchers find brain trauma in Henry

    Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

    “We would have been very happy if the results had been negative, but multiple areas of Chris Henry’s brain showed CTE,” said Julian Bailes, director of BIRI and chairman of neurosurgery at West Virginia. Bailes and his colleagues presented results of their forensic examination at a news conference Monday afternoon.
    Click to Read Full Article Courtesy [...]

    Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, Suicides and Parasuicides in Professional American Athletes

    Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

    Abstract: We present 5 cases of professional American contact sport athletes who committed parasuicides and suicides aged 50, 45, 44, 36, and 40 years old. Full forensic autopsies and immunohistochemical analyses of the brains revealed chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). The brains appeared grossly normal at autopsy without gross evidence of remote traumatic injuries or neurodegenerative disease. Brain immunohistochemical analyses revealed widespread cerebral taupathy in the form of neurofibrillary tangles and neuritic threads without neuritic amyloid plaques. CTE refers to chronic cognitive and neuropsychiatric symptoms of chronic neurodegeneration following a single episode of severe traumatic brain injury or repeated episodes of mild traumatic brain injury.