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Concussions In Boxing: Study Looks For Answers About Head Injuries And Fighting

By TIM DAHLBERG   02/15/12 05:19 PM ET  AP

FILE--Muhammad Ali lies on canvas after being knocked down by heavyweight champion Joe Frazier in this March 8, 1971 file photo. The heavyweight championship fight between Frazier and Ali was billed as The Fight, and 25 years later, it still is The Fight, secure in its place in boxing legend. (AP Photo/File)

LAS VEGAS -- The question has puzzled doctors since the days Joe Louis ruled the heavyweight division and boxing rivaled baseball as the biggest sport in the nation:

Why do some fighters suffer brain damage from punches taken in the ring while others get hit in the head for years and show few effects?

A study that has applications outside of boxing could provide at least a partial answer to that one and this, too: Why do some football players suffer concussions while others don't?

Researchers say their intent isn't to end contact sports, but to find ways to make them safer.

"You can't stop these sports, and the last thing we want to do is stop these sports," said Dr. Charles Bernick, the chief investigator for the project. "But we want to be able to protect athletes from long-term brain issues."

Some 148 current boxers and mixed martial arts fighters have already taken their first set of tests for the study, funded mostly by Las Vegas hotel magnate Kirk Kerkorian and conducted at the Cleveland Clinic's new Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health in downtown Las Vegas. Researchers hope to eventually enroll more than 600 fighters in what is hoped to be at least a four-year study of their brains.

The motive for most of the fighters is simple – they save $800 to $1,000 for a baseline MRI they would need anyway to get a state license to box or participate in professional MMA. For some, though, it is more about peace of mind than it is about the money.

"It's my profession and I want to pursue a long, healthy life," said Diego Magdaleno, an undefeated super featherweight currently ranked No. 2 by the World Boxing Association. "If there is anything that will help me keep from going into the deep end with any kind of severe injury I'm all for it."

That the study – the first big project for the new center – is based in Las Vegas is fitting because the city is recognized as the boxing capital of the world and is also the headquarters of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. A gala celebrating Muhammad Ali's 70th birthday on Saturday at the MGM Grand – site of most of boxing's major fights during the past two decades – is a fundraiser for the center.

Ali suffers from Parkinson's disease, a degenerative brain condition that some doctors say can be brought on by punches to the head. Ali's own neurologist told The Associated Press last month, however, that he didn't believe the former heavyweight great's condition was caused by head blows.

Bernick said much still isn't known about why some fighters develop Alzheimer's or dementia pugilistica – also known as punch drunk syndrome – while others seem to suffer little from repeated hits to the head. The study, he said, could lead to better ways to predict which fighters are more at risk for brain damage later in their lives.

"Our study is not to prove that getting hit in the head will lead to brain damage. We know that already in some sense," he said. "We know being exposed to repetitive blows to the head is a risk factor to developing these conditions, but you can't prove it in any one person unless you have an autopsy."

The list of boxers who suffered from brain damage is a long one, and goes back a long way. Louis had dementia symptoms late in life, while Sugar Ray Robinson – who sometimes boxed every other week and fought an astonishing 1,403 rounds in his career – developed Alzheimer's disease in his later years. Jerry Quarry, a heavyweight contender who fought Ali twice, died at the age of 53 from dementia pugilistica, while his brother, Mike, a light heavyweight, died from the same thing at age of 55.

As far back as 1928, doctors were studying the causes of brain damage in boxing. That year, Dr. Harrison S. Martland told the New York Pathological Society about his observations of fighters:

"Fighters in whom the early symptoms are well recognized are said by the fans to be `cuckoo,' `goofy,' `cutting paper dolls,' or `slug nutty,'" Martland said. "Punch drunk most often affects fighters of the slugging type, who are usually poor boxers and who take considerable head punishment, seeking only to land a knockout blow. It is also common in second rate fighters used for training purposes, who may be knocked down several times a day."

Still, there are large numbers of fighters who have never suffered any noticeable brain damage, and doctors have yet to pinpoint why these athletes don't seem to be affected by repeated blows to the head.

"We don't know why two individuals both exposed to the same number of blows and years of fighting, why one person develops chronic brain disorders and one doesn't," Bernick said. "When it comes to cumulative head trauma there are many, many things we just don't know."

During their first visit to the clinic, fighters are given an MRI and a series of cognitive and memory tests. They are tested for judgment and reasoning, and doctors look for signs of impulsiveness and depression. The tests will be used as a baseline for annual checks, and researchers will study all the data to see if there are common links.

"We would hope it would go on forever, but we need at least four years," Bernick said. "We hope to learn enough by then to give us some insight into what happens in real time to individuals involved in activities where they are exposed to head trauma."

Bernick said the study may provide valuable information that can be used in other sports, like football, where concussions are an ongoing issue. The Cleveland Clinic is also involved in concussion studies, including one which looks into the effectiveness of a blood test in identifying concussions in college football players.

Promoter Bob Arum said he welcomes the study, which, he said, could be particularly useful when a boxer is deciding how long he will fight.

"A lot of questions people have about when is enough enough will be able to be somewhat solved by what's being done there," Arum said. "We'll have a body of facts and evidence that we never had before."

Magdaleno, who has been fighting since the age of 8 and has had 132 amateur and 21 professional fights, went with his brother, Jesse, also a professional fighter, for his first test at the clinic. He plans to take the battery of tests after his upcoming March 23 fight against Miguel Beltran Jr. in Tucson, Ariz.

"When I first heard about it I wasn't too interested because I didn't understand it all," he said. "But after it was explained to me, I'm all for it. I want to be an inspiration to others and make them come in and do their tests, too."

Earlier on HuffPost:

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11:41 AM on 02/20/2012
The Romans banned boxing apparently is was to savage of a sport.. I love boxing I just hate it when a champion stays to long for his own good.. I don't blame them though imagine being cheered upon as a god who would give that up..
06:21 PM on 02/17/2012
Most people do not seem to realize that the gloves are not intended to soften the blows to the head, but to protect the hands.

When asked why he had named all of his children George, George Foreman explained that he was a heavyweight boxer and sooner or later that would be the only name he could remember.
09:37 PM on 02/19/2012
Most people don't realize that padded headgear is not intended to soften blows to the head, but to add an extra layer of protection to the knuckles of the person delivering the blow.
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KeepNIt2Real
Big man out? Lebron wins. What are the odds?
09:59 AM on 02/17/2012
Just think of what happens to football players after years of headbutts on the line of scrimmage...burned pot of meat.
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BeBop33
bob's yer uncle
08:43 AM on 02/17/2012
just wait until these UFC guys get older...they'll make the boxers look like Jeopardy contestants...
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jeremyemilio
My micro-bio is NOT empty
11:21 AM on 02/17/2012
Nope. No standing eight count in MMA = Fewer concussions (by far) and fewer deaths in the ring (by far). Not to mention that boxers punch much harder, and when you're being outboxed you have no choice but to spend the night being hit in the head, but when you're being outstruck in MMA you can grab hold of the guy and stop him from hitting you.

But don't let facts stand in your way.
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BeBop33
bob's yer uncle
11:55 AM on 02/17/2012
uh huh...they don't get kicked and kneed in the face and they don't let guys get pounded while they're laying on the canvas in boxing either...

your're right though...don't let the facts get in your way...
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
06:30 PM on 02/19/2012
u need to get intelligized before you make non fact supported guesses
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
03:42 AM on 02/17/2012
Of course it is harmful. When we were children we had a rule in boxing, no hitting the head. Then I got a TV and was shocked that boxers can hit the head.
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jeremyemilio
My micro-bio is NOT empty
02:23 AM on 02/17/2012
My bet is they will find what boxers themselves have suspected for a long time: It's not really the 'repetitive blows to the head' that are the problem. It's a single event (or two) that does virtually all the damage. Boxers often trace their brain trauma back to a specific roundor fight (or, just as commonly, trace an opponent's brain trauma back to their own hands). They're probably onto something.

That said, it's like a lottery: The more you get hit in the head, the more chances for that single life altering event. Which is why some guys don't seem to be effected and others do, and some guys get hit hard repeatedly in their career and win the lottery and make it out okay, while other guys get hit hard only once or twice and lose the lottery and come out hurt. When guys die in the ring it is rarely suggested that such deaths result from the cumulative effects of a career, rather than the obvious immediate result of a punch or series of punches in the specific fight in which the death occurs.

The time to get out isn't when you have racked up x number of blows to the head, but when you're chances of taking that one bad blow rise (i.e. when your hands and feet and head movement slow so you become a target, it's time to get out... even if you've never been hit hard in your life until that point).
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10:48 PM on 02/16/2012
Great pic here of Ali getting back on his feet. Tough dude.... He was never counted out in a fight.
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
08:58 PM on 02/16/2012
ill rank the top brain killing sports:
1.boxing
2.football
3.hockey
4.mma
like the article said, repetitive blows to the head are what is recognized as what causes these brain malfunctions. in boxing you can stand for 12rounds and eat hundreds of brain rattling shots. standing eight counts ensure that if you can stand back up you can make the concussion you just suffered is complicated by possible extra concussions. the softer gloves as compared to mma glovesmeans nothing. concussions happen from the force of a shot rattling the brain. 2 more inches of cushion does nothing to stop this hurtful force. there have been studies that prove this. the only thing that boxing gloves do is slow the chance of getting cut. this is why MMA IS SAFER than boxing. there is no standing 8 in mma. if you are rocked chances are the ref is going to jump in and end the fight in the next second or two.
football and hockey are the same deal.. head on head or even head on ground collisions rock the crap out of a man. and many players play through concussions when they know they shouldnt. these are mens sports but more awareness of concussion symptons needs to be available likre this study is doing. a man should not feel guilty for benching himself because he knows his brain just got trounced. that needs to be stated in locker rooms from the pros on down to the pee wees
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KeepNIt2Real
Big man out? Lebron wins. What are the odds?
09:59 AM on 02/17/2012
excellent post!
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12:18 PM on 02/17/2012
You omitted soccer....

The Senate Hearings, held last year had, compelling testimony from a former female soccer player about the concussions she got from playing soccer.
06:26 PM on 02/16/2012
This is even a question?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
happyblackman
Gotta have more cowbell baby!
05:49 PM on 02/16/2012
Does this question even need to be asked? When one suffers blows to the head, repeatedly? Not good.
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JonShank
Changing the world one person at a time...
05:44 PM on 02/16/2012
My Mother suffered from Dementia and she only had like 23 pro bouts...
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Kid Notorious
A rambunctious scamp
04:58 PM on 02/16/2012
Isn't Parkinson's just a degenerative genetic condition? I'm no doctor, but Michael J Fox wasn't a boxer... Plus having seen most of his fights, he truly didn't take all that many big hits as someone else posted...
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JonShank
Changing the world one person at a time...
05:43 PM on 02/16/2012
Who... Michael J. Fox or this Parkinson guy?
08:19 PM on 02/16/2012
Ali, like Freddie Roach, had a chin -- it was a blessing and a curse. Both guys took way too many punches.
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
11:28 PM on 02/16/2012
i never knew freddie roach was a pro boxer. it all makes sense now.. the speech impediment. the great insight in the sport. im off to go read about him and find some clips. thank you my good sir for the info
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canpete
03:52 PM on 02/16/2012
ali is a shell of his former self, i'm sure that the punches may have contributed to his condition but i believe there were other brain issues.
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jeremyemilio
My micro-bio is NOT empty
01:58 AM on 02/17/2012
Ali is every bit at bright and quick as he has ever been. He has a neurodegenerative disease that makes it difficult for him to control his movements (including the muscles involved in speech).

I.E. He's no 'shell'. Quite the opposite... It's the shell that is the problem. That's still him in there. We shouldn't forget that.
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canpete
02:05 PM on 02/17/2012
certainly not "quick" in body....
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cybolt
This Space for Rent
02:56 PM on 02/16/2012
Seems shamelessly exploitative to use Ali's picture when the guy didnt get hit all that frequently.

Jerry Quarry is the poster boy for head injuries from boxing.
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sven1olaf
Liberty and Justice for all!
06:02 PM on 02/16/2012
after the comeback he was a punching bag in the ring.
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
11:28 PM on 02/16/2012
agreed.
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
11:30 PM on 02/16/2012
in the early years i agree, he never got tagged. but like @svenloaf said, when he came back was when he took plenty of brain rattlers
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cybolt
This Space for Rent
12:28 AM on 02/17/2012
My point was a relative one. ***Many*** other and better examples than Ali.
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RobJames
busy scraping conservatism off the sole of my shoe
02:51 PM on 02/16/2012
Repeated strikes to the head from a professional boxer can cause brain damage?.......This is news.