Years of hits in sports like football and soccer, even without concussions, can trigger neuron loss and inflammation in the ...
The shooter who killed four people inside a midtown Manhattan office tower in late July had the degenerative brain disease ...
The gunman who killed four people in an NY C office building in July had chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), according to the New York City medical examiner’s office.
A medical examiner has confirmed that Shane Tamura, who killed four people in a Manhattan office tower this summer, was ...
Shane Tamura, a Las Vegas casino worker, shot and killed four people at the NFL's headquarters in New York in July.
The man who killed four people in the New York City skyscraper that is home to NFL headquarters carried a note blaming the ...
Shane Tamura had "unambiguous evidence" of chronic traumatic encephalopathy when he opened fire at the NFL office in New York, killing four including NYPD Officer Didarul Islam.
Could repeated sports concussions really help mold an individual’s actions years down the road? That’s the chilling question ...
The former high school football player who killed four people inside a Manhattan office tower that houses the headquarters of the NFL, and who blamed the league for hiding the dangers of brain ...
The shooter left a suicide note at the July scene, wondering if CTE, tied to playing youth football, could be responsible for his mental illness.