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The New York City shooter who sought to attack NFL offices said he had the degenerative brain disease CTE, thought to be ...
The NYC shooting suspect claimed to suffer from CTE, a brain disease that's linked to head injury, and sought to target the ...
NFL players believe that they have chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), according to a study by Havard T.H. Chan School of ...
The disease has been diagnosed in more than 100 former NFL players and arisen as an existential threat to the United States’ most powerful pro sports league.
The gunman accused of killing four people in New York City suspected he had chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE — a ...
Explore the connection between chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) and the NFL, as Shane Tamura's case raises new concerns about player safety and mental health impacts.
A New York City official said the suspected gunman who fatally shot at least four people inside a Park Avenue skyscraper claimed to have CTE.
The progressive brain disease can be caused by repeated trauma to the head and has caused serious health problems for athletes who participate in contact sports, such as football.
There's no way anyone can definitively say they were to have it. And that can actually be very damaging if that's all they focus on, because that's going to, more often than not, prevent them from ...
Tamura expressed frustration with NFL's handling of CTE and had history of depression, headaches before killing four people ...