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Traumatic Brain Injury and Post Concussion Syndrome For traumatic brain injury (TBI) and post concussion syndrome (PCS). |
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#1 | ||
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Junior Member
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I have recently been doing my own research regarding concussions, to be frank I don't trust most physician's opinions, so I have taken it upon myself to independently research.
I have two main topics I am inquiring about, the first is about the actual structural damage to the brain. If you had two people that suffered literally identical injuries (just thoeretically), and had the same structural damage to the brain, is it possible that one person may experience symptoms while the other does not? I ask this because I am friends who play football, who do not ever experience concussion symptoms, even when they get hit extremely hard. Is a person's tendency to experience symptoms, almost like the pain threshold? I have a very high pain threshold. So if someone was cutting me as opposed to a friend, I wouldn't feel as much pain as they do, but the injuries are identical. Sorry if this seems confusing, basically I am just asking if someone with a less severe brain injury can experience more severe symptoms than someone who does. Secondly I was wondering about this, "gate," concept. I have not dramatically increased my blood flow for quite a few months, could the very fact that I have not increased my blood flow be the cause for the symptoms? Same with noise, I have not been in a noisy area for many months and now I get headaches when I am put in those situations. Could I be experiencing these symptoms due to the fact that I am not used to the noise? Thanks in advance. |
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#2 | ||
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Legendary
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Thomas,
There is a saying, If you have seen one concussion, you have seen ONE concussion. No two are alike. Two different people with the same exact impacting force will have entirely personal experiences with symptoms. Prior impact history, differences in brain development, and a whole variety of differences may explain why some can tolerate more than others. I don't understand what you refer to as 'gate.' Some say we condition ourselves to tolerate different levels of stimuli. That may be true for an uninjured brain but the injured brain often has lost the ability to filter out certain kinds of stimuli. If this is what you mean by gate, then, yes, it is an injury not a pattern that determines how much stimulation can be tolerated, at least for most of us with injured brains. Some can re-adapt to a level where they can tolerate the visual or auditory stimuli but from what I understand, this has more to do with some physical neurological recovery and maybe some learned skills at focusing despite the sensory overload. For example, I can tolerate and process more sounds if I close my eyes. Years ago, a neuro did a AEP (Auditory Evoked Potential) exam. This measure the waveforms as auditory stimuli is taken in and processed. He was astounded that my brain have virtually no ability to 'gate' or filter out extraneous stimuli. btw, Your friends who appear to tolerate head impacts may become more concussion symptomatic as they age. Anybody who allows their brain to be traumatized risks neurological deterioration. Studies have shown that the concussed brain has less tolerance for all kinds of stress factors. Those with the higher intelligence tend to show more concussion symptoms. Regarding blood flow, The Buffalo protocol has shown improvements in tolerance for physical exertion. It works by staying below the symptomatic level of effort and slowly increasing that level over a period of weeks.
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Mark in Idaho "Be still and know that I am God" Psalm 46:10 |
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#3 | |||
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Member
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Mark stated it well, similar impacts and similar resultant structural damage can have very different outcomes. "Less severe" impact does not always equal less severe symptoms. In my case for example, my TBI was categorized as moderate to severe, and included a skull fracture with an epidural hematoma that required craniotomy surgery. It took about six months but my symptoms did resolve. Yet many people have relatively "minor" injury (at least as defined by measurable criteria such as GCS) and have affects that last years. The majority of concussion patients fully recover, although multiple concussion increase the likelihood of persistent symptoms. Wishing you well in your continued recovery.
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What Happened: On November 29, 2010, I was walking across the street and was hit by a light rail commuter train. Result was a severe traumatic brain injury and multiple fractures (skull, pelvis, ribs). Total hospital stay was two months, one in ICU followed by an additional month in neuro-rehab. Upon hospital discharge, neurological testing revealed deficits in short term memory, executive functioning, and spatial recognition. Today: Neuropsychological examination five months post-accident indicated a return to normal cognitive functioning, and I returned to work approximately 6 months after the accident. I am grateful to be alive and am looking forward to enjoying the rest of my life. |
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#4 | |||
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Member
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I ran up three flights of stairs 4 days ago challenging my little sister to a race, and I am still feeling the results. I feel like I am falling down while reclining in a chair. Such is life for me now, but I hope that someday I can find a way to cope with this so that I can consider getting married and having kids because as I am now, that is not going to happen. Good Luck! Happy Easter! ~Margarite
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Fell off a horse in late winter of 2009 blacked out for a couple seconds, had amnesia for 10 hours (still don't remember this time), had 2 CT scans, 2 MRI's, 1 MRA all negative. Since the first concussion I have continually knocked my head into different things purely by accident or from being stupid. These many concussions over a short period of time have caused constant migraines, nausea, and dizziness/lack of balance. Migraine triggers are: light sensitivity (especially to florescent or bright lights) sound sensitivity (especially to high pitched or loud sounds) temperature sensitivity (especially to cold or extreme heat) activity (especially if breathing increases or head is jostled) pressure on head (sinuses, hats, headbands, sunglasses, pony-tails) lacks or quality (food, sleep, water) tension (stress, tight muscles, tired eyes, sickness) |
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