The bad thing is some coaches - you can do the research on this guy - will run a player off the team if he has concussion problems so either you play when you shouldn't and make it worse or you are out of a scholarship.
Near the end of his life he told his wife, Cassandra, he wanted to donate his brain to Boston University so pathologists could look for CTE. In the researchers' report, published Monday in JAMA Neurology, doctors found clumps of abnormal tau protein scattered throughout his brain in a pattern researchers say is one of the hallmarks of CTE.
"It was the worst CTE I've seen in an individual this young" said study coauthor Dr. Ann McKee. "It was quite widespread," said McKee, chief of neuropathology at the Bedford Veterans Administration and a professor of neurology and pathology at the Boston University School of Medicine.
Keck had played tackle football since he was age 6 and had sustained more than 10 concussions by the time he was a junior in college. The jolt to the brain had left him with excruciating headaches and unable to play. He became so sensitive to light that he placed heavy blankets over the windows.
By the time Keck was 25, he had lost the ability to work and had become completely dependent on his wife.
Following Michael's wishes, his wife, Cassandra, asked doctors to send his brain off to BU. Researchers there discovered that Keck not only had CTE, but also that it was as severe as what had been found in the brain of 43-year-old Seau.
Near the end of his life he told his wife, Cassandra, he wanted to donate his brain to Boston University so pathologists could look for CTE. In the researchers' report, published Monday in JAMA Neurology, doctors found clumps of abnormal tau protein scattered throughout his brain in a pattern researchers say is one of the hallmarks of CTE.
"It was the worst CTE I've seen in an individual this young" said study coauthor Dr. Ann McKee. "It was quite widespread," said McKee, chief of neuropathology at the Bedford Veterans Administration and a professor of neurology and pathology at the Boston University School of Medicine.
Keck had played tackle football since he was age 6 and had sustained more than 10 concussions by the time he was a junior in college. The jolt to the brain had left him with excruciating headaches and unable to play. He became so sensitive to light that he placed heavy blankets over the windows.
By the time Keck was 25, he had lost the ability to work and had become completely dependent on his wife.
Following Michael's wishes, his wife, Cassandra, asked doctors to send his brain off to BU. Researchers there discovered that Keck not only had CTE, but also that it was as severe as what had been found in the brain of 43-year-old Seau.