Chris Nowinski: Can I have your brain? The quest for truth on concussions and CTE
Dr. Chris Nowinski is leading a global conversation on concussions, CTE and the future of sports. Full bio
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if you've met me in the last five years
a bit of an odd question:
if you don't know my story
and I was an athlete
to play football at Harvard University.
like most Harvard graduates,
from Monday Night Raw in 2002 and 2003,
affectionately like to call
by my colleague Bubba Ray Dudley,
permanent postconcussion symptoms:
depression, feeling in a fog.
how could I make this pain go away.
the answers I needed from doctors,
into the medical literature.
this whole story about concussions
Football's Concussion Crisis"
it's not really just about concussions.
chronic traumatic encephalopathy or CTE.
because we only knew about it from boxers.
too many times with boxers
start to rot, to degenerate.
and problems with cognition,
control issues, aggression.
were studied for this disease.
50 years old, already had dementia.
45 years old when he took his life.
decided to look at their brains
a big deal out of it.
the first two cases came in positive,
news story about this,
with these cases of CTE.
November 20, 2006.
just took his life.
I grew up watching.
a Division II football coach
his nickname was Dirty Waters.
about the concussions he had.
where Andre Waters said,
smelling salts and go back out there."
if he might have CTE, too.
made him choose to end his life.
who did the first two studies, and I said,
study Andre Waters."
died in the county in which I work,
he died in Florida.
you're going to have to figure out
the medical examiner
in Florida, and I said,
have the brain of Andre Waters?"
study him for CTE?"
he didn't believe that was a real disease.
do you mind if I have it?"
of his next of kin,
who his next of kin was and ask them,
Andre Waters's 88-year-old mother.
a breath and I thought,
an 88-year-old grieving mother
said, "Don't do it.
this poor woman through,
from this disease
prevent this from happening in the future,
and do something that's very hard."
third... no voice mails.
was so gracious about the call and said,
what happened to Andre.
in the last five years of his life."
diagnosed with the disease.
of three NFL players here.
a little bit more serious.
the Concussion Legacy Foundation,
some guy calling for brains.
the best research team I could find.
at the VA here in Boston,
how to cure degenerative brain disease,
by actually studying the brains.
in the world focused on CTE.
and it's my job to get the brains
and her brain bank, right in the middle.
Dr. Robert Cantu,
of scientists that I support.
in those early years.
by reading the obituaries.
poor families that I've been calling
to ask for their brains.
as it started to really eat away at me,
can I find another way
their brains to this research?
what if we could create a culture
to donate their brain after they died?
was a brain donation registry.
to donate their brain to science.
a hockey player in 2009.
was a former Harvard hockey player,
in the NHL at the time.
what this was about.
his brain to science,"
to the locker room the next day,
pulled him aside and said,
your brain to science."
How many games are you going to miss?"
they keep in their wallet.
obviously first, it says 01.
to have people like Brandi Chastain,
Hall-of-Famer Nick Buoniconti
signed up to pledge his brain.
and the great thing about it
in changing how we're able to get brains.
more families call us.
on taking this information,
towards a cure,
that we've able to get over the years
in the world of this disease
100 brains since we started this.
is very frightening.
the headline in July
NFL players we looked at
football players we looked at,
that's a very big concern to me.
to actually treat this disease?
CTE in living people,
that are going to be coming
in the next five years.
is here to not only facilitate this work,
hey, we can prevent this.
in the head so much.
hitting children in the head.
to hit a five-year-old in the head
open up the door to this disease.
a lot of work ahead of us.
on our way to curing this disease.
my story a little more now.
to know each other a little bit better,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Chris Nowinski - Social entrepreneurDr. Chris Nowinski is leading a global conversation on concussions, CTE and the future of sports.
Why you should listen
Dr. Chris Nowinski is an All-Ivy Harvard football player-turned WWE professional wrestler-turned neuroscientist. He discovered the concussion crisis the hard way: a 2003 kick to the chin in a WWE tag-team match ended his career, causing post-concussion syndrome and sending him on a journey where he uncovered a public health conspiracy that continues to cost lives.
Nowinski wrote the investigative expose Head Games: Football’s Concussion Crisis in 2006 and soon after founded the non-profit Concussion Legacy Foundation (CLF), where he serves as CEO. He co-founded the world-famous Boston University (BU) CTE Center, where he serves as the outreach, recruitment, education, and public policy leader, as well as the VA-BU-CLF Brain Bank, where he led recruitment for the 2017 study that found 110 of 111 deceased NFL players had CTE. His journey has been profiled in media outlets like HBO's "Real Sports", ESPN's "Outside the Lines" and the New York Times, and he was the subject of the award-winning documentary Head Games: The Global Concussion Crisis by celebrated director Steve James.
Nowinski earned his doctorate in behavioral neuroscience from Boston University School of Medicine and has authored more than 25 scientific publications. VICE Sports called Nowinski "the man most responsible for making CTE part of the national conversation," and Sports Illustrated said, "It is Nowinski's figure which looms behind the doctors and the headlines and the debate roiling over sports'newfound commitment to minimizing head trauma."
Chris Nowinski | Speaker | TED.com