Thirteen years ago, Dr. Bennet Omalu, a pathologist working at the Alleghany County Coroner’s office in Pittsburgh, performed an autopsy on one of the Steel City’s greatest sports heroes: Steeler Hall of Famer “Iron” Mike Webster.
What the Nigerian physician found shocked him. Webster’s teeth had rotted away and he had resorted to using Super Glue to try to reattach them. His remains looked and smelled like he had been living in his car, which he had.
Omalu began wondering how a man so celebrated in life wound up dying as he did. The answer to that question is a story of courage, perseverance and more than a little faith. And it’s depicted brilliantly in the new film “Concussion” starring Will Smith.
Omalu examined Webster’s brain, which showed no readily visible signs of trauma. But further tests, which Omalu paid for out of his own pocket, revealed “brown and red splotches” all over his brain. These splotches, called “Tau proteins,” are also found in the brains of those suffering from Alzheimer’s and senile dementia. They’re described as being “kind of like sludge, clogging up the works, killing cells in regions responsible for mood, emotions, and executive functioning.”
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