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Styf: Bears played concussion by the book, but still put Cutler at risk

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“When they are injured, we take them out. Before that, no.”

That was Lovie Smith, after Sunday night's game, explaining why Jay Cutler went back into the game after being violently hit by the Texans' Tim Dobbins.

It was clear Cutler had been hit hard. It's less clear why he wasn't removed from the game immediately and sent to the locker room.

He was sent to the locker room early for examination for a rib injury three weeks ago after getting body-slammed by Detroit's Ndamukong Suh on “Monday Night Football.”

This time, he stayed in the game until being removed at the half.

The Bears say they played it by the book, having the trainers examine Cutler during a challenge of the play he was hurt on. The NFL agreed.

But that doesn't help the fact that Cutler was put at a huge risk by re-entering the game and promptly running down the field, diving and taking a hard hit again.

In the science of concussions, there are few certainties. There's more we don't know than we know, especially about what causes long-term damage.

What we do know is that an injured brain, like Cutler had, is more susceptible to further injury.

The same thing happened in 2010, when Cutler remained in the game after his concussion against the Giants and was later removed at halftime. Much like Alex Smith, quarterback for this week's Bears opponent, who threw a touchdown pass after his injury before being removed.

What we don't know is what it could mean for Cutler, or Smith, long term.

People like to count concussions and think that means something.

The reality is, if the concerns are long-term memory loss and health issues, the count doesn't mean anything. Each player reacts differently.

Some players have multiple concussions in a career and remain healthy post-football. Others are never diagnosed with a concussion – only repeated sub-concussive hits – and they leave football without their facilities intact.

Doctors and scientists can't pinpoint what makes one player more susceptible. That's why so much money is pouring into research to find those answers. Because at this point, they aren't even close.

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