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Preventing Concussions

A new football helmet could help players avoid brain injuries.

By Brittany Sauser

Monday, February 11, 2008

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Xenith, a startup company based in Lowell, MA, has developed a new football helmet to better protect athletes from concussions. The helmet is lined with a thermoplastic material that can adapt to the force of impact. On a routine hit to the head, the discs cushion the head, while following a harder, more forceful blow, the material remains stiff and prevents the sudden jarring of the head that causes concussions.

Head protection: A new football helmet developed by Xenith is lined with 18 thermoplastic airflow shock absorbers embedded in a flexible cap to better protect athletes from concussions. The helmet’s design adapts to the force of an impact and dissipates the energy to decrease the acceleration of the head and prevent the jarring that causes concussions. A transparent inside view of the helmet is shown at top, while the complete helmet is shown at bottom.
Credit: Xenith

"The idea is that we have something that is more intelligent and responds uniquely to what is happening to it," says Vincent Ferrara, the founder and CEO of Xenith. Testing has also shown that the discs can withstand hundreds of impacts without notable degradation in performance. The Xenith helmet will be available this spring for approximately $350, which is considerably more expensive than helmets already on the market.

The protective material in football helmets has evolved over time from traditional foam padding to gel-filled and inflatable padding. But Joseph Maroon, a neurosurgeon at the University of Pittsburgh Sports Medicine Center, says that none of the designs for football helmets are ideal, and concussions remain a common problem in the sport. "It is estimated that 10 to 25 percent of football players in the United States sustain a concussion each year, and the effects can be catastrophic," says Maroon, the team physician for the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers. "There is a need for a new type of helmet technology."

To address this need, Xenith has embedded 18 shock absorbers into a flexible cap that lines the inside of a helmet. The shock absorbers are made out of a plastic that is elastic and flexible, thus it can accept a wide range of forces and return to its original shape instantaneously. The shock absorbers are hollow discs featuring a tiny hole to allow air to flow in and out. Upon impact, the walls of the discs collapse to absorb and dissipate the energy.

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"When you force air or any fluid to flow through a small hole, you get an adaptive response: the harder [the disc] is hit, the stiffer it behaves, because you are generating more resistance inside the disc," says Ferrara. "You want a system to behave softly under low energy, but under high energy, you want it to get progressively stiffer so that it does not collapse down to nothing."

The inside lining of the Xenith helmet shown here is a flexible cap embedded with shock absorbers, or black discs, intended to dissipate the energy of a hit and lessen the sudden movement of the head that causes concussions.
Credit: Xenith

Comments

  • Concussion research
    There is a movement toward concussion prevention in the form of jaw protection. The NFL, NHL and the military have found blows to the jaw or boxing trauma to be the origin of the majority of MTBI. Helmets only protect from a minority of head trauma, new designs have provided great protection, fitting and monitoring are a problem. A retainer like mouth guard developed the the N.E. Patriots head and neck specialist may hold the answer to protecting the jaw. on the gridiron and in Iraq. Go to www.mahercor.com for studies and news stories.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    stevieboy
    02/11/2008
    Posts:1
    Avg Rating:
    3/5
  • What's the point?...
    Sports like American football, rugby or hockey are for violent idiots. Which brings up the question of what is the point of protecting such people's brains, when there is so little to protect to begin with?...

    Just let them bash each other's heads. That is exactly what they want, don't they?
    Rate this comment: 12345

    gabrielg01
    02/11/2008
    Posts:405
    Avg Rating:
    3/5
    • Re: What's the point?...
      What's the point??? Are you a complete idiot? Are you one of those 4.0 book smart guys without any common sense? Great job of stereotyping every football player in the country. Is the QB at Harvard  just out to bash someone's head in? Rudy Neiswenger , the center for the Kansas City Chiefs is prepared to attend medical school. My 13 year old son suffered a concussion in baseball when he was 9 and now he quarterbacks his team and will play high school football next year. He will be wearing a Xenith and based on his placement test will be in honors classes. Concussions are serious Gabe, if they ever develop the next level of pocket protectors I'm sure you'll be first in line.    
      Rate this comment: 12345

      jmike
      01/20/2009
      Posts:1
      Avg Rating:
      5/5
  • Xenith Helmet
    My son just got one of these from school today.  It is well worth the cost.  It is very well put together and looks like it will provide extra safety for him. A++++
    Rate this comment: 12345

    waterdude
    08/17/2009
    Posts:1
    Avg Rating:
    5/5
  • Xenith
    We bought my son who is 10 and suffers migraines a Xenith helmet about 2 months ago. I wasnt told that there was a "breaking in period." He has tried to wear it several times and gets headaches after about 10 minutes of wearing it. The local rep was of no help and now we are out 350 on a helmet. No thanks. We are going back to Schutt.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    toddh
    09/30/2009
    Posts:1
    Avg Rating:
    4/5

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