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NFL Congressional Testimony to Include Published Mouth Guard Data

Published: December 2, 2009

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  Paula Duffy
Examiner

More than a year ago I wrote a piece about a simple mouth guard which prevented concussions when worn by athletes. I asked why the NFL wasn’t all over it, testing it, buying it, and making it part of their equipment.

The mouth guard was developed and is sold by a dentist named Gerald Maher who for many years has been the dentist for the New England Patriots. As Patriots players got the hang of the device they raved about it, (testimonials on Maher’s company’s website ) especially players who had already suffered heard trauma.

As those Patriots players like Matt Cassel and Mike Vrabel moved about the league they brought their mouth guards with them and members of their new teams were introduced to the device. But this was mere anecdotal evidence and the NFL said it needed peer reviewed studies, in which it never seemed to be interested enough to put into motion.

The Maher mouth guard doesn’t prevent all concussions. It works specifically with the lower jaw but its success rate, until recently all anecdotal, is eyebrow raising if not astounding.

And then a few weeks ago, a study was published on Dr. Maher’s device. Its study subjects were high school age football players, and according to a statement filed with the House Judiciary Committee by Maher’s company, Mahercor Laboratories, LLC, it validates the company’s methods of examining a player’s jaw and fitting a device to help prevent concussion from direct blows.

Two weeks ago, that same committee, chaired by Representative John Conyers, (D-MI) heard testimony from NFL executives, former players, wives of former players, and medical professionals. The topic was what the league will do with recent study results that found its retired players are 19 times more likely than the average person who never played football to be diagnosed with a memory disorder.

The league now has data it can’t ignore any longer. But since the study didn’t prove a direct causal link between concussions on the field of play and the condition of the brains of ex-NFL players, it doesn’t want to admit anything and says it needs to study the problem in more detail.

In the meantime, concussions occur weekly on every team, some more newsworthy than others.

All the Judiciary Committee did was to give the league its chance to insist that it was working on the problem therefore government intervention isn’t necessary.

Some conservative members of the committee used that time to talk about their disdain for poking Congress’ nose into a private workplace, even if worker safety is a factor. Funny how OSHA doesn’t seem to apply to football players.

Mahercor has an advocate in Senator John Kerry (D MA) as well as endorsements from the ADA, the current president of the AFL-CIO, and a board member of Blue Cross/Blue Shield. It has the study results published in the The Academy of Sports Dentistry’s Referring Journal, the Journal of Dental Traumatology,

I have no relationship with Mahercor and write as a journalist and observer. In the year since I began following this story, the concussion problems for the NFL have not only continued, but data about brain damage to former players as young as their mid-thirties is very disturbing.

I think it’s time to take some relief where the league can find it right now. As I said, the Mahercor mouth guard isn’t a cure for all head trauma. But it’s a great start and it seems odd that the league doesn’t use its two-minute drill to get some relief where it exists right now.

http://www.sportingnews.com/blog/the_sporting_blog/entry/view/42133/mouthguards_key_to_avoiding_becoming_a_drooling_wreck

Gregg Easterbrook today

Why won’t the NFL set a positive example and require advanced helmets? And the league’s announcement says nothing about double-sided mouthguards, the fastest, cheapest step against concussions. New England Patriots players wear double-sided mouthguards. If the NFL required them for all players, the NCAA and most high schools would soon follow.

 

Oct 1/09 research publication

http://www.mahercorlabs.com/pdf/Dental_Traumatology%20Publication.pdf

 

www.mahercor.com

Read more NFL news on BleacherReport.com


NFL Concussion: Bring Your Mouth Guard

Published: September 4, 2009

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Photo: Dr. Gerald Maher

Gerald J. Maher, DMD, has served as the New England Patriots team dentist since 1979, a position he got after working with boxer Marvin Hagler.

With the help of research from Dr. Jack Stenger at the University of Notre Dame, his company Mahercor Laboratories LLC developed The Maher Mouth Guard, a mechanism that is said to aid in the prevention of concussions for all athletes playing in contact sports.

The company has been working with the National Hockey League, a sport in which concussions have become all too common, and this type of oral appliance also can benefit soldiers. He recently spoke to a group of Pop Warner players and parents, and stressed the importance of avoiding the OTC mouth guards.

“Because the models off the shelf fit so poorly, the players don’t wear them or they chew on them and distort them,” said Dr. Maher, whose company works with the Appliance Therapy Group in manufacturing the custom mouth guards. “TMJ is my area of expertise and we have designed a mouth guard to cut down the incidence of concussions.”

Mark Picot, Executive Vice President of Mahercor Laboratories, LLC, describes the Maher Mouth Guard as more of a “medical device” than a mouth guard, noting that other versions available do not address the creation of a more stable relationship between the jaw and skull at the temporomandibular joint (TMJ), which better enables athletes to dissipate the force that comes from a hard blow to the chin area.

He adds that a recent peer-reviewed publication in Dental Traumatology should help teams and athletes become more aware of the link between violent blows to the jaw area and concussions, and how a TMJ device such as the Maher Mouth Guard can place teeth in a better position to withstand such violent blows.


Dental Device Helps Reduce Concussion Risk for NFL Athletes

Published: August 28, 2009

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Dental device helps reduce concussion risk for athletes
By MARK KRAM
Philadelphia Daily News

kramm@phillynews.com

TO CLEAR UP any confusion that has surrounded the dental appliance he has
developed, Dr. Gerald Maher stresses that it is only useful in preventing
concussions up to a point. When a player takes a solid hit to the head, or
experiences a jolt to the neck that produces a whiplash effect, he says
there is “nothing” that his device would be able to do to avert head trauma.
Chances are that player would end up with a concussion.

But it’s the player who takes a blow to the jaw that “The Maher Mouth Guard”
could conceivably help. By creating a more stable relationship between with
the jaw and skull at the temporomandibular joint (TMJ), the appliance better
enables players to dissipate the force that originates from a violent blow
to the chin area.

Without that shock absorber in place, a concussion and/or
other neurological damage can occur when the jaw slams into the skull.

“This is not a panacea,” says Maher, the team dentist for the New England
Patriots. “What it is, is a TMJ device that places the teeth in better
position to withstand a blow. That is what it does. And it has prevented
some concussions.”

Concussions have been an increasing concern in sports, chiefly in the NFL
and NHL. Long range, they can been linked to the onset of chronic traumatic
encephalopathy (CTE), a brain abnormality that leaves some former players
battling memory impairment, emotional instability, erratic behavior and
issues with impulse control.

CTE has also been discovered in the autopsies
of former NFL players Tom McHale and John Grimsley, both of whom died
prematurely in their 40s last year—McHale of a drug overdose; and Grimsley
of an accidental self-inflicted gunshot wound.

While the NFL has formed a
committee to study the effects of concussions, it has not yet endorsed “The
Maher Mouth Guard” for leaguewide use. Maher has had better luck with the
NHL, which he says has been “actively pursuing” a dialogue with him.

With the publication of a peer-reviewed paper that was released recently in
the journal Dental Traumatology, Maher says there is now scholarly support
for the anecdotal evidence he has accumulated since he developed the
appliance back in the 1970s.

Former boxing champion Marvin Hagler was an
early success story for Maher, who has since used it with equal success in
his work with the Patriots.

Former players such as John Hannah and Lawyer
Milloy both became advocates of it. So did Asante Samuel and Ellis Hobbs,
both of whom played for the Patriots before signing with the Eagles.

Samuel is quoted on the Mahercor Laboratories Web site as saying that he has
not had a concussion since he began wearing The Maher Mouth Guard for more
than 3 years.

Hobbs says he had not had a history of concussion but believes it prevented
him from having any. “Well, I have been hit before where I know that if I
did not have it in, I know would have gotten one,” says Hobbs. “Plus, it is
not as bulky as some of the other appliances I have used, which allows me to
breathe and communicate easier. It works.”

Co-authored by Maher, Dave Singh, the director of continuing education for
the SMILE Foundation, and Ray R. Padilla, lecturer at the UCLA School of
Dentistry, the paper that appeared in Dental Traumatology focused on a
3-year study of high school athletes with a history of concussion.

According
to Maher, the high school players who participated in the study had to
continue playing in college or beyond.

“We ended up with 31 players in the study who continued to play their sport
in college,” says Maher. “What we found was that between them they had
approximatley 53 concussions before wearing the appliances. And they only
had three between them after they began wearing the appliance.”

Maher adds that high school athletes are especially prone to concussions.
“In fact, high school athletes are more susceptible to concussions than NFL
players,” says Maher. “When you are young and you are still developing, your
parts are still not lined up properly—especially your teeth or your neck.
You are still growing and chances are you have not yet had your final growth
spurt. Some [young people] have. But I would say over 50 percent of them
have not, which is to say that the head, the jaw and the cervical are not
yet perfectly aligned.”

Maher says he plans to submit his paper to the NFL for review. He says that
even if the appliance can lead to some decrease in concussion, it would be
worthy, given the problems some NFL players have had with cognitive function
in their later years.

Says Maher: “Football players get beat up. And some of
them become mentally impaired. Hopefully, something like this can help.”

The NHL has been far more receptive to Maher, who has consulted with the
Washington Capitals, San Jose Sharks, Minnesota Wild and others (but not the
Flyers). According to Maher, the American Hockey League’s Hershey Bears were
fitted with the appliance last year and have experienced excellent results.

“They had had 11 concussions before they used the appliance,” Maher says of
the Washington affiliate. “Afterward, they did not have a single
concussion.”

Maher adds that he expects it to be widely used in the AHL this year.

“I am interested in prevention,” says Maher. “I would like to intercept the
concussion before it happens. And in cases where the jaw or chin is
involved, we have proven we can do that.”

And he says the players have been in large part receptive.

“They seem to love it,” he says. “Not every single one of them, but the vast
majority of them.

www.mahercor.com

Link to 08/09 Journal of Dental Traumatology study

http://www.mahercorlabs.com/pdf/Dental_Traumatology%20Publication.pdf