LAWRENCE, Kan. — Every time the Kansas football team takes the field, whether for practice or a game, the training staff wheels out a trunk full of just about every kind of medical tool imaginable.
Slings for shoulder injuries. Splints for broken bones. Rolls upon rolls of tape.
Now, it includes technology to better deal with head injuries.
The school is testing a new system called C3 Logix, which has been under development the past two years by the Cleveland Clinic's Innovation Group. Using an iPad2 as the assessment tool, the C3 system incorporates elements of the widely used ImPACT test and other neurocognitive exams with balance and vision tests to present what developers hope is a more comprehensive picture of head injuries.
"We take our iPad out to practice. We bring it on the road when we travel. It's right there in the sideline trunk to be administered if we have a student-athlete with some issues," said Murphy Grant, the director of sports medicine at Kansas. "I think it's great technology."
The system, which was born out of research into Parkinson's disease, isn't billed as something that can reveal with absolute certainty whether someone has a head injury. But it does provide more information for trained medical staff to make that determination.
It is just part of a booming business centered on the diagnosis and treatment of head injuries, and comes at a time when the issue has never been a bigger part of the public consciousness.
Just this month, the NFL and its players' association reached a $765 million settlement after more than 4,500 former players accused the league of concealing long-term dangers of concussions and rushing players back onto the field. The settlement ended two months of court-ordered mediation. As that lawsuit was being settled, three former college football players filed suit against the NCAA saying it didn't do enough to prevent, diagnose and treat brain injuries.