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Baseball Helmet[]

New Helmet Prototype Introduced to Protect Pitchers[]

By Michael Popke
EastonFront

Easton helmet for baseball pitchers.

Easton-Bell Sports CEO Paul Harrington joined representatives from Little League International and the California Interscholastic Federation on Monday to unveil a new helmet prototype designed to help protect pitchers on the mound. "With our pitching helmet prototype, we have redefined what is possible and launched a new era of protection for baseball pitchers," Harrington said from the manufacturer's new Helmet Technology Center in Scotts Valley, Calif.

The prototype was developed, Harrington said, to protect players like Gunnar Sandberg, the 17-year old Marin (Calif.) Catholic High School pitcher who suffered life-threatening injuries in March 2010 when he was on the mound and hit in the head by a batted ball. Sandberg, who attended the product introduction and will be testing the prototype for comfort and performance, was placed in a medically induced coma to save his life after his skull was fractured and his brain swelled.

Now recovered and back on the field, Sandberg is striving — along with his family — to improve safety for baseball players and help prevent other families from suffering similar tragedies. “The time is right to introduce headgear that is well designed, comfortable and, more than anything, protective for the pitchers and fielders," says Bjorn Sandberg, Gunnar's father. "We are on board to help minimize the risk.”

The pitching helmet prototype uses lightweight energy-managing materials to provide protection to the most vulnerable areas of the head, without compromising comfort or performance, Easton-Bell officials say. The helmet is made of expanded polystyrene polycarbonate, which is attached to a liner and elastic strap.

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Defensive players and umpires not behind home plate remain the last individuals on the field without stronger head protection. First- and third-base coaches for Major League Baseball teams began wearing head protection following the death of Mike Coolbaugh, a first-base coach for the Colorado Rockies' Double-A team in Tulsa, Okla., who was struck by a line drive in July 2007. College and high school rules mandate that baseball and softball players also wear helmets in coach's boxes.

In related news, the National Federation of State High School Associations has outlawed composite baseball bats for the 2010-11 school year. The ban will remain in effect until composite bats — constructed with the same aluminum exterior as standard aluminum bats, but with a woven graphite wall on the interior — can meet the Batted Ball Coefficient of Restitution (BBCOR) performance standard, which measures the "bounciness" of the ball and bat. Before the composite bat is reinstated at the prep level, the committee also wants it to produce consistent results throughout its life, be labeled as a composite product and be made tamper-evident.

Loose-Fitting Football Helmets Tied to Worse Concussions in Teens[]

High schools should have athletic trainers check players' head gear for proper fit, doctor says.

High school football players wearing loose helmets suffer worse concussion effects than players whose helmets fit properly, new research suggests.

Young athletes with loose helmets had the highest rates of concussion symptoms, such as drowsiness, hyper-excitability and sensitivity to noise. Their concussions also lasted longer and were more severe, the study found.

"Concussions are very complicated injuries, but [loose helmets] could be one more risk factor for experiencing more severe concussions," said study author Dr. Barry Boden. He's a sports medicine specialist at The Orthopaedic Center in Rockville, Md.

"There's been a lot of interest in concussions but there really hasn't been much focus on how helmets fit," Boden added. "So we thought this study would be unique and original, and wanted to see if there were any issues that contributed to concussions."

Boden's research is scheduled to be presented Friday at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons in Orlando, Fla. Studies presented at meetings typically haven't been peer-reviewed or published, so the results are considered preliminary.

Concussion is a mild form of traumatic brain injury. These injuries can be caused by a jolt, bump or blow to the head, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Concussions are caused by sports injuries as well as car accidents, falls and other trauma. Symptoms include headaches, memory and thinking difficulties, and emotional and sleep disturbances, according to the CDC.

USA Football, the national governing body for amateur football in the United States, issued a rule in 2012 aiming to ensure proper helmet fit for high school athletes.

But, Boden said it wasn't yet clear how effective the rule might be.

The lingering effects of football-related concussions have also dominated discussions about the safety of professional and college football.

Boden and his colleagues reviewed national high school sports-related injury data collected over nine years. The data included information on more than 4,500 first-time concussions.

Football players with improperly fitting helmets who suffered concussions had much higher rates of drowsiness, hyper-excitability and noise sensitivity than those with helmets that fit correctly. Helmet fit was determined by an athletic trainer, the study authors said.

In addition, the study found that players with concussions who were wearing helmets lined with an air bladder had higher rates of light and noise sensitivity. They also had concussions of longer duration, compared to players with foam- or gel-lined helmets, the study revealed.

Helmets lined with air bladders can deflate, leaving it looser on the head, according to the study researchers.

Dr. Mark Riederer, a sports medicine expert who wasn't involved with the new research, said all high schools should have athletic trainers who can check the fit of football helmets before players take the field.

"I wouldn't necessarily rely on coaches, kids or parents to check that," Riederer said. He's a clinical assistant professor of pediatric orthopaedic surgery and sports medicine at the University of Michigan Health System in Ann Arbor.

"If your head is not secured well in the helmet itself... it doesn't surprise me that you'd have a higher concussion severity," Riederer said.

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