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TALENTED HOKIES RESEARCH BRAIN IMPACTS WHILE BATTLING AGGIES
24 September 2003 - Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

While they were busy overpowering the Texas A&M Aggies Sept. 18 in Lane Stadium, the Virginia Tech Hokies became the first athletes in the world to test a new brain injury monitoring system. Every year in the United States, thousands of athletes suffer traumatic brain injuries and many die as a result. Virginia Tech researchers and sports medicine professionals have launched the monitoring project in an attempt to help prevent these injuries.

Stefan Duma, associate professor of mechanical engineering at Virginia Tech and director of the Center for Injury Biomechanics, came up with the idea for the project in February after seeing a presentation about a new type of sensor system that can be used to record impacts to football helmets. The system, called Head Impact Telemetry System, is manufactured by SIMBEX, a company in Lebanon, New Hampshire.

After talking with SIMBEX president Rick Greenwald about HITS, a collaborative project was initiated by Duma; Dr. Gunnar Brolinson, chair of sports medicine at the Edward Via Virginia College of Osteopathic Medicine and head football team physician; and Mike Goforth, head trainer for Virginia Tech Sports Medicine. VCOM bought the HITS package for the research team and became the primary sponsor of the project, in collaboration with Sports Medicine and the Virginia Tech College of Engineering.

Over the past six months, the research team has developed a comprehensive study that combines the data from HITS with new methods for clinically evaluating brain trauma. Currently the project is in the pilot stage.

Each of four Hokies' helmets is fitted with six accelerometers, which measure impacts to the helmets in terms of "G," or gravity, forces. During football games, the sensors transmit real-time impact data to a sideline computer system that keeps track of a range of head impact data for each player wearing the HITS sensors.

"Football helmets receive a lot of impacts that will register but that don't indicate injury," said Bill Bussone, Duma's graduate assistant. A fellow player smacking a sensor-equipped helmet might cause the system to show several G forces, for example. What the researchers are hoping to discover is the level at which impacts begin to result in injury and the cumulative effects of impacts.

Duma and Brolinson can read and evaluate the data on the spot while impacts are taking place. They plan to use the monitoring system during every Virginia Tech home game this season. In the coming year, Duma said, as many as 64 Hokies can be connected to the monitoring system simultaneously.

"There's great potential for prevention of sports-related brain injuries," Duma said, "but the lack of scientifically sound, evidence-based studies is a barrier to improved prevention and treatment. We need to learn more about what happens to the brain at the moment of impact and to study other factors, such as the protective values of different types of headgear."

One injury of particular interest to the researchers is concussion. If their monitoring project succeeds, someday coaches will be able to tell from the sidelines if a player is at risk of having suffered a concussion.

Although Hokie football will be the groundbreaking arena for the monitoring system, Duma believes that this research can lead to advances in brain injury prevention in a number of sports that pose the risk of head injury.

"Once we collect and evaluate a body of data, we can redefine injury limits for the human brain," Duma said. "In order to design better sports headgear, we need data on what types of mechanical loads and accelerations actually cause injuries."

http://www.vt.edu

About: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
From a meagre beginning in October of 1872, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, popularly known as Virginia Tech, has evolved into a comprehensive university of national and international prominence. As Virginia's largest university with 25,600 students and one of the top 50 research institutions in the nation, it is an institution that firmly embraces a history of putting knowledge to work. That tradition is rooted in our motto, Ut Prosim: "That I May Serve," and our land-grant missions of instruction, research, and solving the problems of society through public service and outreach activities.


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