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MLS discusses concussion protocols
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MLS discusses concussion protocols

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - Soccer is by no means immune to the ravages of concussions, just ask former league MVP Taylor Twellman who was forced to retire in 2010 in the prime of his career, or Terry Boss, a Seattle Sounder who hung up his cleats last month.

Men's soccer ranks fifth in terms of game-related concussions, according to Dr. Ruben Echemendia, a neuropsychologist for Major League Soccer and the National Hockey League.

Echemendia, who led the MLS Medical Symposium on Saturday in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, implemented concussion protocols for the NHL and is appplying the same principles to the MLS.

"The management of the injury remains basically the same," Echemendia said. "What's different are the rules as in soccer, we have rules about substitution that make it difficult to do the kinds of evaluations that we would do in the NHL or even in the NFL," according to Sports Illustrated.

The MLS has added a neuropsychologist trained in the diagnosis and management of concussions to each team.

Last year, the league instituted baseline neuropsychological testing whttps://st be repeated after an injury occurs. The results of the tests give medical professionals an idea of the cognitive ability of an ahttps://before an injury occurs, and then during the recovery process.

In the MLS, players must be removed from a game or practice if a concussion is suspected and evaluated using three protocols. Players must "pass" their neuropsychological tests and be symptom-free before returning to the field. Then they are subject to a gradual return-to-play protocol that increases their activity level and heart rate incrementally. If symptoms do not return they may then receive medical clearance from the team physician and team neuropsychologist, who have the ultimate authority.

"Once they're symptom-free both physically and cognitively, in other words they're saying that the feel fine, then our protocol is to evaluate them using neuropsychological testing to make sure that cognitively they are fine," Echemendia said. "Because very often the physical symptoms will resolve prior to the cognitive symptoms, and we really don't know that until we test them," according to Sports Illustrated.




Read more at the Washington Examiner: https://washingtonexaminer.com/sports/soccer/2012/01/mls-discusses-best-protocol-concussions/2072101#ixzz1ivgEH2sG

Questions/comments? contact Jean Rickerson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

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