An end to this very sad and public journey.
Particularly moving when his team mate Kevin Sinfield carried him over the finish line of the Leeds Marathon last year.
RIP Rob Burrows.
Last edited by: Fullchat on Sun 2 Jun 24 at 22:23
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I'd never been aware of him until I heard of his death on the radio this morning.
Inspiring story.
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There seems to be a pretty clear link between MND and playing Rugby. Can’t do you any good getting regularly hit on the head.
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>> There seems to be a pretty clear link between MND and playing Rugby. Can’t do
>> you any good getting regularly hit on the head.
Not heard that link before although footballers and dementia seems well proven.
Are there other rugger players with MND?
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Doddie Weir of course.
academic.oup.com/brain/article/146/5/1745/7077743
Some links in studies between sports and intense physical activity and MND/ALS though causation far from proven.
Perhaps nerve damage caused by oxidative stress under anaerobic conditions in particular? i.e. repeatedly undertaking sprinting type activity where your body needs more energy output than your lungs can immediately provide oxygen for, rather than running at a sustainable rate.
Probably not from head impacts - may explain why cross-country skiers are also possibly at increased risk despite the lack of beatings.
The flipside of course is exercise improves cardiovascular health more than the risk of MND.
Last edited by: Lygonos on Mon 3 Jun 24 at 09:40
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“The flipside of course is exercise improves cardiovascular health more than the risk of MND.”
It is of course perfectly possible to take cardiovascular exercise without constantly hitting your head.
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>> It is of course perfectly possible to take cardiovascular exercise without constantly hitting your head.
Is probably not the head impacts if there is a link with MND, more the intense anaerobic bursts during the sport.
Dementia on the other hand (and faaaar more common than MND) likely is the brain bashing.
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Think I’ll stick to walking, although the distances are becoming shorter, and I no longer walk with a few folks who seem intent on breaking records for speed walking.
I like to chat with friends, and if out of breath I’m going too fast....regular stopping to admire views, albeit only for a minute or two, is something I increasingly do these days.
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David Niven also comes to my mind.
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The story even melted my heart....a real hero
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Surprised no one has mentioned Stephen Hawking.
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