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"My work stress headache was actually rare brain disease which left me paralysed"
"My work stress headache was actually rare brain disease which left me paralysed"

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • Health
  • Yahoo

"My work stress headache was actually rare brain disease which left me paralysed"

A 'fit and healthy' woman was left paralysed after headaches she thought were 'work stress' turned out to be signs of an ultra-rare brain disease. Alicja Faryniarz, 44, said she knew something 'wasn't right' but her symptoms were constantly dismissed by doctors as migraines or sinus problems. The accountant began suffering from severe headaches during her 20s which led to fainting episodes and extreme fatigue. However each time she went to her GP, she says they "brushed it aside" and prescribed her with painkillers despite her suffering "intense pain". It wasn't until September last year that her brain disease was picked up when she suffered a stroke while playing a tennis match. Alicja collapsed on the court and was taken to hospital where she was diagnosed with brain arteriovenous malformation (AVM). AVM affects less than 1 per cent of Brits and is caused by tangled blood vessels that create irregular connections between arteries and veins in the brain. They are usually congenital, but they can form later in life, and people with the disease rarely show symptoms, according to the NHS. Alicja had a three inch AVM which ruptured and paralysed the right side of her body and also left her in a coma for three days. She is now warning of the "hidden" dangers of the rare condition which she had no idea she was born with.

Football's Brain Injuries
Football's Brain Injuries

New York Times

time30-07-2025

  • Health
  • New York Times

Football's Brain Injuries

The gunman who opened fire in a Manhattan office building had a note in his wallet claiming that years of playing football had left him with a brain disease known as C.T.E. He inveighed against the N.F.L., which has an office in the building, though none of the four people he killed worked there. In the end, the gunman, Shane Tamura, shot himself in the chest. 'Study my brain please,' the note said. 'I'm sorry.' We won't know until experts examine his brain whether Tamura had C.T.E. But we know he played football, the sport most associated with the disease, through high school. Today's newsletter explores what we know about C.T.E. and its connections to football and violence. What causes C.T.E.? C.T.E., or chronic traumatic encephalopathy, is caused by an accumulation of blows to the head. There have been cases linked to hockey, rugby, wrestling and soccer. The blows needn't be violent collisions that cause concussions. Rather, the disease seems to progress with both the number of hits and the cumulative impact of all those hits, as the chart below shows: In a 2017 study, a neuropathologist examined the brains of 111 dead N.F.L. players. All but one had C.T.E. Tamura never made it to the N.F.L. But studies have also found C.T.E. in people who played contact sports in their youth. A 2023 study of 152 athletes who died before age 30 showed that more than 40 percent had C.T.E. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Gunman Who Targeted NFL Cited Grievances Over Football-Connected Brain Disease
Gunman Who Targeted NFL Cited Grievances Over Football-Connected Brain Disease

Wall Street Journal

time30-07-2025

  • Wall Street Journal

Gunman Who Targeted NFL Cited Grievances Over Football-Connected Brain Disease

Shortly after Shane Tamura was identified as the shooter at the NFL's Park Avenue headquarters building in New York on Monday, investigators found a clue that spoke to his potential motive. Tamura wrote in a note that he believed he had chronic traumatic encephalopathy, commonly known as CTE, a brain disease associated with head injuries and often found in former football players.

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