It's hard to imagine a pediatrician advocating child abuse or a
cardiologistrecommending an all-bacon diet. So it's no surprise that many
neurologists favor banning the one sport--boxing--where the object is
essentially to pummel your opponent's skull.
"Blows to the head damage the brain," says George D. Lundberg, M.D.
"That'a al, predictable, and unarguable." And it's why the American
Medical Association--and its counterparts in 36 other countries--have
called for the sport to be banned.
Since there's little hope that professional boxing will voluntarily
close shop or that the government will outlaw the sport, Lundberg is
pursuing another strategy. He hopes to knock out the supply of amateur
fighters that keeps the sport thriving. In the Journal of the American
Medical Association, which he edits, Lundberg called on the U.S. Olympic
Committee not to send American boxers to the 1996 games. He also asked
the armed forces to stop sponsoring fights between military
personnel.
Boxing, says Lundberg, poses a two-pronged threat to a fighter's
brain. The immediate danger is that a cranial vein will tear. With no
means of escaping the skull, blood from a severed vessel presses fragile
neurons against solid bone, causing severe injury or death.
More insidious, though, is the damage that mounts, blow by blow,
over a boxer's career. By his 25th fight, irreversible neurological
damage may show up on psychological tests and brain scans. Eventually,
atrophy occurs and the fighter's brain may lose several ounces of
tissue.
Boxing, of course, is by no means the only sport that imperils the
brain. Concussions are common in football, and soccer players who
repeatedly head fast-moving balls risk brain injury as well. And freak
accidents can occur even in an innocuous sport like billiards: One
player's brain was pierced by a pool cue that entered his skull through
his eye.
But these sports, argues Lundberg, are philosophically different
from boxing, where giving your opponent a "concussion is desirable. It's
how you win." And that, he says, is "not only medically wrong, but
morally abhorrent."
Because amateur boxing has instituted several safeguards, including
shorter rounds and better medical supervision, some experts feel that
amateurs fighters face lit-fie serious risk. But their skulls still
absorb thousands of jolting blows, says Lundberg, and "a brain doesn't
know whether the fighter whose fist hits it was paid."
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