Find My Team

Submit PhotosLog InRegister

High School Sports

Rose football player died of Second Impact Syndrome


Sep 24, 2008

A state medical examiner in Greenville ruled Tuesday that the death of a Greenville Rose football player was accidental and the result of “second impact syndrome.”

In a statement, Dr. M.G.F. Gilliland said Jaquan Waller died because of a “very rare condition which can occur when two relatively minor head injuries occur in a short time interval. It usually occurs in young athletes and is very rapidly fatal.”

Waller, a junior running back, left the field after being tackled in Rose’s game Friday against Wilmington Hoggard. He then collapsed on the sideline. Waller was taken to Pitt County Memorial Hospital, where he was placed on life support. He died Saturday morning. Waller had been hit in practice two days before the game and suffered a mild concussion.

The cause of death was “closed head injury (due) to sequential impacts during contact sport,” according to the statement.

Waller is the third N.C. high school football player to die this season.

Matt Gfeller, a sophomore at Winston-Salem Reynolds, died Aug. 24, two days after a hit that he took in a game against Greensboro Page led to cranial bleeding.

On Aug. 12, Atlas Fraley, a senior at Chapel Hill, was found unresponsive in his home a few hours after he called 911 complaining of body aches and dehydration following a morning scrimmage. An official cause of death has not been released.

Heather Mayo, Pitt County Schools spokeswoman, said an investigation into Waller’s death is under way. She said the investigation will include verifying everything that took place, interviewing some students and staff and reviewing district procedures. She did not say how long that would take.

“We want to make sure we do a thorough investigation,” Mayo said. “Folks are going to want answers, and we realize folks are going to want to know things as soon as possible.”

Waller suffered a mild concussion in practice last Wednesday, according to Gilliland’s statement. He was examined by the school’s injury management specialist and held out of practice the rest of the day, and his mother picked him up and took him home.

“[Waller] was coherent, was able to say where he was. His memory and cognitive assessment checked out,” Mayo said. “Based on what Jaquan presented, [injury management specialist] did not recommend any further medical evaluation.”

Waller was in school on Thursday and was examined and cleared to participate in the team’s light workout that afternoon. According to Gilliland’s statement, based on information available to the medical examiner, Waller had returned to his “previous level of functioning” by Thursday. He was in school on Friday, and he was checked out again before the start of the game.

“All indications were that he was coherent and the same old Jaquan,” Mayo said.

In the second quarter of Friday’s game, the hit Waller sustained, coupled with the hit he sustained two days earlier, caused his brain to swell. Neither hit on its own would have been fatal, according to Gilliland’s statement.

“The swelling was sufficient to cause him to collapse by the time he had walked off the field, the usual length of time described in the literature on this rare syndrome – two to five minutes,” Gilliland’s report said. “Although medical attention was available very rapidly, the brain swelling could not be reversed and led to brain death by Saturday morning.”

Contact Tim Candon at 821-8697 or tcandon@wral.com.

COMMENTS

14 Comments



page 1 | 2
<prev    next>
sort order: oldest first | newest first

On another note...when are the parents going to start acting like parents? Why don't they step up and refuse to let the kids play when they know they have been hurt. I have heard a parent whose kid was knocked out at a game. According to the rules at the time, a that child was not allowed to participate until a doctor signed off on his condition. Wouldn't you know that the father was a doctor and signed the papers just so his kid could report back in to the game. So typical!

PS Now the rules dictate the child sit out for 24 hours and have a doctors note.
jdlarobinson
September 24, 2008 10:56 p.m.
• Report abuse

Again we continue to talk the ideal. The real world you can not mandate that someone chow up and work a game if that person does not exist! All schools in my county look for certified trainers. That does not mean they will magically appear. They ARE NOT there. Mr Stevens you keep talking the ideal. I know what happens because I live it everyday. I am the first responder at my school. I am a first aid trainer and I do not need to ask anyone the difference. I am not the greatest, but I do what I can and I NEVER hesistate to send someone to a doctor. Dont blame the schools for doing the best they can with what the state gives them. The state talks a good game but when it comes down to saying what they want, they pull back the funds everytime.
jdlarobinson
September 24, 2008 10:54 p.m.
• Report abuse

I couldn't agree more lamontrobinson.
Nick Stevens
September 24, 2008 5:21 p.m.
• Report abuse

I am truely sorry to hear about this young man. As a football coach, this is one of my biggest fears. Schools are required to have a certified athletic trainers at every practice and game. I know that some counties have teachers to take some type of sports first aid course, but this is not a National certification. This course is mainly used to show people how to tape ankles and what to put ice on. People who take this course have not gone through a state university accredited program for athletic training. As parents, you should know if your child school has a National Athletic Trainer's Association certified trainer at practices and games. This should be done no matter how much money a county has. If you have the sport, you need a certified trainer.
lamontrobinson
September 24, 2008 12:24 p.m.
• Report abuse

My prayers go out to the family.
mblake
September 24, 2008 11:25 a.m.
• Report abuse

There are school systems in this state that REQUIRE a certified athletic trainer to be an employee at the school. I know in Wake County, a certified athletic trainer is REQUIRED to be at every single football practice and game. They are given two classes to teach during the day, and they take care of all sports. These certified athletic trainers DO have to go to college, they DO have to take the board exam.

Someone who goes and takes a Red Cross First Aid/CPR course is not an athletic trainer. I am certified in First Aid/CPR, I am not an athletic trainer. If you ask an actual athletic trainer about it, they'll let you know the difference.
Nick Stevens
September 24, 2008 11:12 a.m.
• Report abuse

In the school system there are trainers. No they are not always certified trainers, but none the less they are titled trainers. They go through certification courses, not college courses. Of the 6 schools in my county, I am not aware of a single certified trainer on any staff. Sure we have sports doctors that come out and help on games days, but they are generally only interested in helping out with football. Schools are too poorly funded in all areas to entice properly trained people to accept the jobs. Schools take the best precautions they can. No one wants to address the fact that the parents could have stepped in and acted like "parents" and not let the child play. Too often parents place athletics above academics as well as well the being of their child.
jdlarobinson
September 24, 2008 10:43 a.m.
• Report abuse

I am in agreement with hokies3 opinion. A doctor needs to be consulted before any child with a head injury should be allowed to play any contact sport. But it is also the parents who need to take the initiative and take their child to the hospital and make sure that what the trainer has said is correct especially with head and back injuries. I feel for the family of this young man and hope this tragedy opens parents and school staff to the possibilities.
ssnmbll
September 24, 2008 10:02 a.m.
• Report abuse

Too bad low budget schools in poorer counties, like South Granville HS, have gone for years without a "certified" trainer. They have always been a teacher/volunteer with minimal training, maybe just "First Responder" or CPR. Thank goodness SG finally has a certified trainer this year and there have been no serious injuries since I've been watching them in the past 7-8 years. With all the recent serious injuries, maybe the NCHSAA will implement new guidelines/requirements for ALL schools. The poor counties/school districts should get additional funding for "certified" trainers. In Granville County, maybe the s0-called county "commissioners" could forgo one of their many extravagant conventions (in Hawaii!) to help pay for this!
chaseme
September 24, 2008 8:32 a.m.
• Report abuse

That is very sad to hear about this young man, still a child, dying from injuries in a high school sporting event. I was the victim of a poorly staffed high school as well. We had one athletic trainer covering the entire school. He couldn't be at all games at all times. I injured my back and was never diagnosed with the injury. Our trainer never recognized me as having an injury. Now, I am 34, and suffer daily from a severly slipped disc and chronic aches and pain. There's not much I can do except to learn to live with it. It stemmed from playing high school soccer and ice hockey. Of course, that was back in the 80's and 90's, maybe before the awareness levels of these injuries were clear. Parents - if you child plays any sports, please monitor them at all times for injuries. Don't ever brush the injury off as it could affect them for the rest of their lives. Our children are not able to make these decisions for themselves.
koolbike1
September 24, 2008 6:59 a.m.
• Report abuse

page 1 | 2
<prev    next>
sort order: oldest first | newest first

This story is closed for comments.