Traumatic Brain Injury and Post Concussion Syndrome For traumatic brain injury (TBI) and post concussion syndrome (PCS).


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Old 02-20-2013, 04:42 AM #1
sospan sospan is offline
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sospan sospan is offline
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Default Major v Minor Injury recovery times

I have been reading the posts on this board for quite some time and the same theme seems to be coming across again - that people whom have had a major head injury seem to "recover" far quicker and in some cases better than those of us with a mild head injury.

I now this will be a generalisation but after a major head injury, victims are sedated for quite some time whilst any surgery or reconstructive work is undertaken. This is normally followed by planned rehab routine with supportive medication.

Those of us with a mild/moderate head injury normally struggle on for some time trying to live normally, then the battle for recognition by specialists before a treatment begins. From the posts on here and personal experience this can take between 6 and 12 months. So minor head injuries are long way getting off the mark.

There have been some truly amazing recovery and return to work times for people whom have suffered a major injury whilst a lot of us with lesser injuries seem to struggle a lot more.

I am obviously not saying you would be better off getting a major injury but could this be just a coincidence with the persons postings on here or could there more to do with the immediate post accident care?
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Old 02-20-2013, 06:10 PM #2
Mark in Idaho Mark in Idaho is offline
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Mark in Idaho Mark in Idaho is offline
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Default

I think there are two different issues at play here.

One, many severe injuries are focal. They may include a penetration or fracture or such. The injured area may take some time to heal but the rest of the brain is able to return to normal more quickly. Those injuries where the doctors sedate the patient to maintain a coma or coma like state, the objective is to reduce the brain's work load to allow it to heal and to reduce the chance of swelling. This reduced workload allows the brain to heal faster.

Second, many of us have diffuse injuries or more precisely diffuse axonal injuries where we have global needs to recover. Without the ability to have uninjured areas to carry the load while the injured areas heal, we continue to struggle along using the injured areas as best we can.

A third issue is whether we have other injuries like upper neck injuries that can exacerbate the diffuse injuries.

Think of it this way, if you broke your leg and had it cast and took time to let it heal by resting and using crutches it would heal in a timely manner. If the leg is not cast, one would need to take extreme extra care to stabilize it to allow it to heal. If this was not done, the leg would not heal properly and in a timely manner.

There are many permutations of complications to make this unable to be predicted. Best to not try to figure this out.
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