# Brain health

## [January Winter Sports Awareness and How to stay safe](https://oculogica.com/january-winter-sports-awareness-and-how-to-stay-safe/)

January is National Winter Sports TBI Awareness Month, and we are hoping all our athletes remain safe in their sport. A press release by the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, “January is National Winter Sports TBI Awareness Month,” highlights an important seasonal reality; winter sports come with the risk of TBI, including concussions. \[…\]

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## [Avoid Traumatic Brain Injury While Playing Winter Sports](https://oculogica.com/avoid-traumatic-brain-injury-while-playing-winter-sports/)

Popular winter sports like skiing, snowboarding, sledding, ice hockey, snowmobiling and more can put athletes at risk for concussions. The article, “Avoid Traumatic Brain Injury While Playing Winter Sports,” by Brain & Life dives deeper into these injuries to the head and the effects on athletes. The article explains these injuries happen when the brain

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## [Repeated Concussions in Contact Sports: Why Early Detection Matters This Winter](https://oculogica.com/repeated-concussions-in-contact-sports-why-early-detection-matters-this-winter/)

A recent review “The Long-Term Effects of Repeated Concussions in Contact Sports,” by Riaz Ahmed (Premier Journal of Science, 2025), found that repeated concussions can have lasting effects on memory, attention, and emotional health. The review highlights that multiple injuries increase the risk of cognitive decline and even neurodegenerative disease over time. This research is especially

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## [Repeated Head Impacts and Brain Function: Staying Safe for 2026 Sports Seasons](https://oculogica.com/repeated-head-impacts-and-brain-function-staying-safe-for-2026-sports-seasons/)

A recent article “What Happens When a University Football Player Takes Repeated Head Impacts?” by Michelle Werdann, University of Nevada highlights a growing concern for athletes: the effect of repeated head impacts on brain function, even when no concussion is diagnosed. The study referred to in this article shows that subtle changes in eye movement,

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## [The Hidden Problem in Sports: How Many Concussions Are Going Undiagnosed?](https://oculogica.com/the-hidden-problem-in-sports-how-many-concussions-are-going-undiagnosed/)

A study by leading researchers at Boston Children’s Hospital and University of Pittsburgh Medical Center entitled, “The Prevalence of Undiagnosed Concussions in Athletes,” published in The Journal of Trauma, revealed almost one-third of athletes who come in for a concussion report having had a previous head impact that caused concussion symptoms, but were never diagnosed. This is

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