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Concussions not just a risk in contact sports

Crystal Lake native suffered many during high school, college playing career

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Former Crystal Lake South and McHenry County College basketball player Kelsey Schiel, 24, suffered at least eight concussions during her playing career and is now paying the price with migraines, eye nerve damage, and sleep and memory issues from the head injuries. (Josh Peckler – jpeckler@shawmedia.com)

CRYSTAL LAKE – Kelsey Schiel can’t play basketball anymore. Because she can’t play, she won’t watch. The game she loved is gone.

A sixth concussion finally ended Schiel’s high school career before she got to play her senior season at Crystal Lake South.

A seventh cut her comeback at McHenry County College short. Her mom won’t forget – can’t forget – that call.

An eighth just freaked everyone out even more. She wasn’t even playing basketball. She was being pulled in an inflatable raft by a boat, flipped off and bumped heads with a friend.

The concussions have taken a toll. The uncertain future might be worse.

“People think concussion, headache, you’re all better,” said Sue Schiel, Kelsey’s mom.

“You’re not.”

• • •

Schiel, now 24, barely noticed her first concussion.

She hit her head on the floor during a basketball game in her sophomore year of high school and went back in the game not long after. It wasn’t until the next night, after Schiel had taken an elbow to the middle of her head during practice, that the consequences of two concussions in two days surfaced.

She was nauseated and vomiting, and her head pounded. Emergency room doctors told her she was experiencing the intensified effects of back-to-back concussions.

Schiel returned to action two weeks later.

Before doctors finally insisted that she stop playing midway through her junior year, Schiel suffered six concussions in all, never sitting out more than two weeks. Twice, she was concussed two times in the same week.

The rest of her junior year and senior year were filled with migraine headaches, memory issues, trouble sleeping and corresponding complications with completing schoolwork. Her left eye no longer tracked correctly, which intensified the headaches.

“When you tell people you can’t play, the coaches are like OK, I kind of get it. But the students, they don’t get it,” Schiel said. “That was the hard part.”

• • •

Concussions have become a much bigger part of the national dialogue in recent years, but the majority of the discussion has centered on high-contact sports – namely football.

Researchers at Boston University, studying the brains of deceased football players, have found that repeated trauma to the head can cause serious long-term health issues such as memory loss, impaired judgment, depression and progressive dementia.

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