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Posted: 2024-09-24T16:24:14Z | Updated: 2024-09-24T16:49:16Z NFL Great Brett Favre Reveals Parkinson's Diagnosis During Congressional Hearing | HuffPost

NFL Great Brett Favre Reveals Parkinson's Diagnosis During Congressional Hearing

The legendary quarterback once said he thinks he could have suffered more than a thousand concussions during his football career.
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Football player Brett Favre went public about his Parkinsons disease diagnosis during a hearing before the House Ways and Means Committee on Tuesday morning.

The NFL Hall of Famer made the revelation while on Capitol Hill to testify about his alleged involvement in a scheme to defraud  a Mississippi welfare fund.

Sadly, I also lost an investment in a company that I believed was developing a breakthrough concussion drug I thought would help others, and Im sure youll understand why its too late for me because Ive recently been diagnosed with Parkinsons, he revealed during the hearing.

This is also a cause dear to my heart. Recently, the doctor running the company pleaded guilty to taking TANF money for his own use, Favre added.

Favre was a top investor in the concussion drugs manufacturer, Prevacus, which received $2 million of Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, or TANF, funds.

Numerous studies have found a strong link between traumatic brain injury and Parkinsons disease.

While Favre has said he can only confirm suffering three or four concussions during his football career, he admitted he could have had more than a thousand while playing.

During a 2018 appearance on the Today show , he said, When you have ringing of the ears, seeing stars, thats a concussion.

And if that is a concussion, Ive had hundreds, probably thousands, throughout my career, which is frightening, Favre added.

Favre has been a vocal opponent of children under 14 playing tackle football.

Having kids play before high school is just not worth the risk, Favre said in a 2021 statement to the Concussion Legacy Foundation. CTE is a terrible disease, and we need to do everything we can to prevent it for the next generation of football players.

CTE can only be diagnosed post-mortem, but a 2023 study from the Boston University CTE Center  found cases in 345 of the 376 former NFL players it studied.

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