WATCH: CPS investigating workout that put high school football players in hospital

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Youth Concussions
FILE – This Aug. 4, 2012 file photo shows new football helmets that were given to a group of youth football players from the Akron Parents Pee Wee Football League, in Akron, Ohio. It’s not just football. A new report says too little is known about concussion risks for young athletes, and it’s not clear whether better headgear is an answer. The panel stresses wearing proper safety equipment. But it finds little evidence that current helmet designs, face masks and other gear really prevent concussions, as ads often claim. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File) Gene J. Puskar

WATCH: CPS investigating workout that put high school football players in hospital

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The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services announced this week that it is investigating the events that led to multiple high school football players being hospitalized following a workout.

Several student-athletes at Rockwall-Heath High School were taken to the hospital following a Jan. 6 workout that many are calling excessive, according to a report.

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Dr. Osehotue Okojie, a mother to one of the players, realized something was wrong with her son when he began to show signs of rhabdomyolysis, the rapid and dangerous breakdown of muscle tissue, she said.

“He couldn’t lift his arms, brush his teeth. He could not lift his hands to wash his face. He had swelling in his muscles,” according to Okojie.

Her son began experiencing the symptoms following a workout three days earlier where he and his teammates were required to do around 400 pushups, she said.

The team was allegedly told to start over whenever one of them stopped, the report noted.

“My son was admitted from Monday to Sunday. He just came home Sunday night,” Okojie said.

Around the same time that her son began experiencing his symptoms, Rockwall-Heath High School issued a statement that the football team’s head coach, John Harrell, had been placed on administrative leave.

Some players, including team captain Brady Luff, have come to Harrell’s defense.

“Our motto, it’s the number 16,” Luff said. “Sixteen ball games to win a championship. We do these workouts, and it’s all about discipline. If we get them right, we move on. If not, we do 16 pushups.”

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“He would never make us do a workout thinking it was gonna put any of us at risk.”

The school district has not released information regarding the exact number of pushups the students performed.

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