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The former Cincinnati Bengals receiver has been identified as the first NFL player to have died with trauma-induced brain damage while still active in the National Football League, according to a New York Times report.
Today, a report from the Brain Injury Research Institute at West Virginia University is expected to announce that Henry had already developed chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a brain disease. The discovery of CTE in some retired NFL players has fueled debate about the dangers of playing football.
Henry was 26 when he died and is the youngest NFL example of CTE, according to the Times. The previous youngest was lineman Justin Strzelczyk, 36, who had been retired from the Pittsburgh Steelers for five years before his death in 2004.
Sean Morey, a special-teams player for Seattle who's co-chair of the players association's brain-injury committee, told the Times: "It's very emotional to hear — it rattles me . . . The fact that this has been found (in an active player) I think it's sobering. You have to ask yourself how many are playing the game today that have this and don't even know about it."
CTE evidence can be detected only by examing brain tissue after death. There's no way to test for it in a living player, according to the Times.
http://content.usatoday.com/communities/gameon/post/2010/06/chris-henry-bengals-brain-damage/1
