Business & Tech

Maryland Firm Leading Research on Measuring Concussions

A Bethesda company is working with the NFL and the military to measure brain injuries, all as a way to help doctors quantify problems.

By Zack Ward
Capital News Service

Imagine if the only way doctors could diagnose injuries was by asking questions about the symptoms.

While fortunately that is not the case for most areas of the body, it is still the case for the brain. But that is something BrainScope in Bethesda is determined to change. According to CEO Michael Singer, the company hopes to one day help remove the subjectivity from deciding whether a soldier or athlete can return to his or her normal activities. BrainScope employees want it to be a doctor’s objective decision using new technology.

Singer says he knows that it “is a very significant and difficult problem that won’t be solved overnight.”

Interested in local real estate?Subscribe to Patch's new newsletter to be the first to know about open houses, new listings and more.

BrainScope focuses mainly on providing the military with technology to help assess traumatic brain injuries, including a seemingly simple white device that hooks around the ears and covers the head with an eight-electrode array. This device is light weight, low-cost and disposable, according to the BrainScope team. It is connected to a portable device that can show doctors brainwave activity.

It is this type of innovative technology that has earned the praise of U.S. Senator Ben Cardin, D-Md., who recently visited BrainScope’s Bethesda office. Cardin applauded BrainScope for being a leader in technology.

Interested in local real estate?Subscribe to Patch's new newsletter to be the first to know about open houses, new listings and more.

In addition to helping the military, BrainScope’s technology could be used to help professional athletes and everyday citizens with athletic injuries.

“We’re very aware of what’s going on with CTE [Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy],” Singer said, referring to the disease that has been discovered in more and more deceased NFL players since former Pittsburgh Steeler Mike Webster was the first to be diagnosed in 2002. 

Brainscope is collaborating with Boston University and the Sports Legacy Institute, to study Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy -- a brain disease --  in retired athletes, said Singer.

A recent PBS Frontline documentary called “League of Denial”exposed the NFL’s attempts to cover up what PBS said were the negative effects of head injuries throughout the 2000s. However, Singer said he believes the league has turned a corner.

“I think that the NFL is definitively trying to understand the problem, raise awareness and tackle it in a very forward way,” Singer said. “And I think BrianScope’s very hopeful to be able to work more with the NFL in the future.”

Like Singer, Cardin sees a potential positive collaboration between BrainScope and the NFL.

“There’s no question the NFL has gone to a new level in awareness on head injuries,” Cardin said. “I think what’s being done here at BrainScope could help them understand head injuries a lot sooner and a lot quicker. Rather than using a subjective test asking a football player questions, what BrainScope offers is scientific information as to the severity of their injury.”


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here