Newer Info from Chris Benoit Story...Next To NO Media Coverage of Course...

stillwantmore

Banned
Joined
Sep 7, 2006
Messages
4,708
Because evidence of severe brain damage due to repeated head trauma over many years as a pro wrestler is less exciting than "ROID RAGE MADE HIM KILL THEM!"

From ABC News Online:


Sept. 5, 2007



The family of Chris Benoit has been searching for answers since late June, when the professional wrestler killed his wife, 7-year-old son and then himself.

At the crime scene, police found anabolic steroids prompting many to suspect that "roid rage" had accounted for Benoit's behavior, which his family found out of character for the 40-year-old.

His family now believes that new test results on Benoit's brain explain his vicious actions.

The tests, conducted by Julian Bailes of the Sports Legacy Institute, show that Benoit's brain was so severely damaged it resembled the brain of an 85-year-old Alzheimer's patient.

Bailes and his research team say that this damage was the result of a lifetime of chronic concussions and head trauma suffered while Benoit was in the wrestling ring.

Benoit's father, Michael Benoit, is speaking out in order to warn other athletes, both professional and student.

Dementia Caused by Multiple Concussions, Doctor Says

After hearing the news that his son had murdered his 7-year-old son, Daniel, and wife Nancy and then killed himself, Michael Benoit struggled to understand how it could have happened.

Michael says Benoit was a "kind and gentle" man who volunteered with the Make-A-Wish Foundation and visited U.S. troops overseas in Iraq.

"First we needed an understanding. The person that did this is not the man we know and love," Michael said today on "Good Morning America."

After the suicide and murders, Michael was contacted by a former wrestler, who suggested he investigate whether years of trauma to Benoit's brain could have contributed to his actions.

"I was grasping for anything," Michael told ABC News' Bob Woodruff. "The world was very black. I mean, we didn't even know how to deal with this."

So Michael turned over part of his son's brain to Bailes, the head of neurosurgery at West Virginia University and former Pittsburgh Steelers team physician.

Bailes and his research team had also analyzed the brains of former NFL players such as Andre Waters and Terry Long, who both committed suicide. Bailes and his colleagues theorize that repeated concussions can lead to dementia, which can contribute to severe behavioral problems.

"There is a constant theme in the failure of their personal lives, their business lives, depression and then ultimately suicide," Bailes said.

Similar Brain Damage Found in Other Athletes

Bailes and his research team took samples from Benoit's brain postmortem and compared these microscopic brain scans to those of a healthy brain.

They found that Benoit's brain showed an advanced form of dementia that appears on the brain scan as brown clumps or tangles. These brown spots are actually dead brain cells, killed off as a result of head trauma, said Bailes.

In Benoit's case, the damage was found in every section of the brain — all four lobes and deep into the brain stem.

"It was extensive throughout Chris' brain," Bailes said. "This is something you should never see in a 40-year-old."

The damage is proof, Bailes said, that Benoit suffered multiple, probably chronic, concussions over the course of many years.

Benoit, in fact, told friends he had suffered "more concussions than he could count."

Benoit's brain showed the same kind of damage Bailes and his team found in four retired NFL players who also suffered multiple concussions and later sank into deep depressions and harmed themselves or others.

Perhaps most disturbing, a person doesn't need to have sustained dozens of concussions to see problems later in life.

"Our research shows that three concussions may be the threshold for lasting damage," Bailes said.

This kind of brain damage isn't new to athletes, but doctors and researchers are starting to understand it better. As far back as the 1920s, career boxers were diagnosed with "punch drunk syndrome," which is now known as chronic traumatic encephalopathy.

Bailes said that while he can't be certain that the brain damage caused Benoit's actions, he believes it is the leading cause.

"We think these changes are not due to steroids," Bailes said. "That has never really been studied, but it's never been in the medical literature or any research that shows steroids do this to the brain. These changes [in the brain] were found in the 1920s before steroids were even invented."

For Michael Benoit and the family, these test results provide a small amount of comfort.

"Bascially, once the findings came out and I had the opportunity to talk to the doctors, we certainly had an understanding of what could have contributed to the tragedy that took place that day," Michael said.

The message Michael would like Benoit's surviving children to take away is that "their dad loved [them] dearly and what happened wasn't his fault."
 
Yeah, its all very tragic and sad ... I have cared for people who have had brain injuries in my line of work and it is upsetting to see this decline in a person, however with regards to Mr Benoit who I will add was my FAV wrestler when I used to watch the sport ... I think that the steroids pushed him over the edge ... ok folk dont understand them, I do as I've done them myself and know enough people who do them and researched them and yes they can make you very aggressive and nasty if you have a tendency towards acting like that and even if you dont with more testosterone running in your body you will feel more nasty at times than if you didnt have all that shit in your system.

Who knows why this gentleman really did what he did ... I feel it was the anabolics that got his temper going mixed with the brain injury that would have impaired his judgement of the situation to act out like he did. If he wasnt juiced to the gills than he MIGHT not have done what he did but than again who knows.

You have to ask yourselves the question ... if indeed he had this brain injury for awhile than why snap now? normally a pattern is shown before someone gets to that stage such as memory loss, moody, loss of appettite etc etc so his family would know better than anyone .. he wouldnt have risen out of bed oneday and just killed everyone from that injury to the head ... unless he was showing symptons for awhile, in which case his family should have said something [easier said than done!] .... like I said, the juice has sent him over that edge .... he has seen the red myst and with the head injury it has foiled his sense of reality and clouded his judgement ... god bless the man, his children, his wife and his family. I always liked the guy.

Let this be a lesson to anyone who is naturally very aggressive to bare in mind that the juice can affect you in a negative light, but please bare in mind I'm not saying for certain that Mr Benoit's case was this ... who knows for sure, its just my feelings ... not gospel and I'm not condeming him either as I have gotten very nasty on the juice when I would NEVER act in that manner ... the stuff can be powerful and lethal!
 
Back
Top Bottom