Study finds less blood flow, smaller frontal lobes in concussed young athletes
TORONTO — Looking back now, volleyball player Julia Hamer admits she feels like an “idiot” for not recognizing signs of a concussion.
This was back when she was playing for the junior national team at age 19, and was smacked in the head by a volleyball.
It was the second blow in six weeks, the first coming from a dive into the bleachers that put her out of the game for three weeks.
After that first injury — in which she was diagnosed with a concussion — she suffered dizziness, confusion, chronic migraines and lost her sense of taste.


