Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
Sports

Former Women's Hockey Star Hayley Wickenheiser To Donate Brain To Concussion Research

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2018 01:12 PM
    BOSTON — Retired Canadian women's hockey star Hayley Wickenheiser will donate her brain to concussion research after her death.
    The Concussion Legacy Foundation says the four-time Olympic gold medallist and seven-time world champion is one of three female Olympians to commit her brain to the Boston-based organization. 
     
    American bobsledder Elana Meyers Taylor and Hockey Hall of Famer Angela Ruggiero of the U.S., were also listed in Tuesday's announcement.
     
    Wickenheiser has been involved with concussion-related causes in the past, including helping develop video game technology to treat concussions last summer.
     
    She co-chairs the advisory board of Highmark Interactive, a Toronto digital therapeutics company developing video games to diagnose and treat concussion and brain injuries.
     
    Wickenheiser, 39, said she suffered dizziness and nausea after taking a hit in a Swedish men's pro league in 2008 and witnessed the deterioration of friend and former NHL player Steve Montador, who was diagnosed after his death in 2015 with chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
     
     
    "As I transition to being an ambassador for hockey in my retirement, I am determined to leave hockey better and safer," Wickenheiser said in a release. "Steve Montador was a friend, and when he was diagnosed with CTE after his death in 2015, I became inspired to do my part to fight this disease."
     
    CTE is a degenerative brain condition that doctors believe is caused by concussions.
     
    The Concussion Legacy Foundation, which supports CTE and concussion research, says more than 2,800 former athletes and military veterans have promised to donate their brains to their organization since 2008. More than 560 of those pledges are from women.
     
    "By pledging my brain to the Concussion Legacy Foundation and the researchers at the VA-BU-CLF Brain Bank, I hope to support the best science and accelerate the development of ways to prevent and treat CTE," said Wickenheiser.

    MORE Sports ARTICLES

    Scott Tupper To Lead Canada's Men's Field Hockey Squad At 2016 Rio Olympics

    Scott Tupper To Lead Canada's Men's Field Hockey Squad At 2016 Rio Olympics
    Tupper and teammate Mark Pearson will be appearing at their second Olympics. They represented Canada at the 2008 Beijing Games.

    Scott Tupper To Lead Canada's Men's Field Hockey Squad At 2016 Rio Olympics

    Renewed Work Ethic, Buono's Leadership Has Lions Off To Roaring Start

    Renewed Work Ethic, Buono's Leadership Has Lions Off To Roaring Start
    VANCOUVER — A willingness to work a little unpaid overtime is among the reasons why the B.C. Lions are a surprise early-season success, according to team veteran Ryan Phillips.

    Renewed Work Ethic, Buono's Leadership Has Lions Off To Roaring Start

    Vancouver Whitecaps Sell Striker Octavio Rivero To Chile's Colo-Colo

    Vancouver Whitecaps Sell Striker Octavio Rivero To Chile's Colo-Colo
    The move sending the 24-year-old Uruguayan back to South America had been rumoured for some weeks.

    Vancouver Whitecaps Sell Striker Octavio Rivero To Chile's Colo-Colo

    Vancouver Canucks Name NHL Ironman Doug Jarvis As Assistant Coach

    Vancouver Canucks Name NHL Ironman Doug Jarvis As Assistant Coach
    VANCOUVER — The Vancouver Canucks have named Doug Jarvis, holder of the NHL's ironman record, as an assistant coach.

    Vancouver Canucks Name NHL Ironman Doug Jarvis As Assistant Coach

    Beating Yuvraj, Harbhajan Singh Was All Fun And Games: Shoaib Akhtar

    Beating Yuvraj, Harbhajan Singh Was All Fun And Games: Shoaib Akhtar
    Harbhajan Singh narrated that he and India teammate Yuvraj Singh were once beaten up by Shoaib Akhtar in a hotel room in Pakistan on an Indian television channel

    Beating Yuvraj, Harbhajan Singh Was All Fun And Games: Shoaib Akhtar

    I've Cried Five Times In My Life, Says Flying Sikh Milkha Singh

    I've Cried Five Times In My Life, Says Flying Sikh Milkha Singh
    Flying Sikh Milkha Singh has shed tears on five occasions in his eventful life -- and the most heart-wrenching was when he saw his family being killed during the 1947 Partition.

    I've Cried Five Times In My Life, Says Flying Sikh Milkha Singh