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-   Traumatic Brain Injury and Post Concussion Syndrome (https://www.neurotalk.org/traumatic-brain-injury-and-post-concussion-syndrome/)
-   -   Is it all in our minds? (https://www.neurotalk.org/traumatic-brain-injury-and-post-concussion-syndrome/205439-minds.html)

Hockey 06-12-2014 07:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SarahSmile0205 (Post 1075428)
Ok... since we seem to have gotten off topic I am going to ask... I am having a hard time regulating my temperature.. normal? I mean i know it is not normal but do i need to be concerned?

Well, our TBI minds do tend to wander... lol

By regulating temperature, do you just mean feeling hot and/or cold - or do you mean your actual measured body temperature is fluctuating?

SarahSmile0205 06-12-2014 07:37 PM

Feeling HOT... sweating buckets...normal body temp...

EsthersDoll 06-12-2014 07:52 PM

Sounds like hormone imbalances to me.

I was having the worst hot flashes before the HRT and I'm unusually very sensitive to hot and cold and even temperature changes since the accident I was in...

thorx89 08-25-2014 02:45 PM

The brain does have stem cells and it does regenerate. Yours is a long-outdated view. Google "neurogenesis". ;-)

anon1028 08-25-2014 03:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by thorx89 (Post 1091597)
The brain does have stem cells and it does regenerate. Yours is a long-outdated view. Google "neurogenesis". ;-)

brain cells are generated extremely slowly in adulthood and only for certain functions. That is why a liver can regrow so much. The brain has very limited capacity to create new cells or I think perhaps a number of us wouldn't need o be on this board anymore

Sitke 08-25-2014 04:47 PM

Is it all in our heads? Nope!! Well, our brains are in our heads but you know what I mean.

When I look back I can see I was severely impaired yet my Dr was dismissing it, I was in trouble, the way my brain was working or rather not working properly was huge.

I would even say to another Dr I was "okay" when clearly I wasn't, that just came out as I realize now I couldn't get the right words out.

People said I looked like a deer in a headlight, I'm amazed some light eventually came through considering the awful "care" I was getting.

Hockey: Thank God you survived that terrible accident, a true miracle :grouphug:

Lightrail11 08-25-2014 06:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by markneil1212 (Post 1091605)
brain cells are generated extremely slowly in adulthood and only for certain functions. That is why a liver can regrow so much. The brain has very limited capacity to create new cells or I think perhaps a number of us wouldn't need o be on this board anymore

Yep, and only in the olfactory bulb and hippocampus according the latest research I've seen. Neurogenesis in the hippocampus may give hope for improved memory, but as you point out this happens slowly.

anon1028 08-25-2014 06:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lightrail11 (Post 1091630)
Yep, and only in the olfactory bulb and hippocampus according the latest research I've seen. Neurogenesis in the hippocampus may give hope for improved memory, but as you point out this happens slowly.

thanks for the extra info. I wonder, even if they could be created on a large scale, what about the damaged ones? the damage to my thalamus causes all kinds of autonomic problems. Wouldn't those old cells have to be disposed of as well as new ones being created.

And for a function like sleep, wouldn't the different brain parts have to learn how to communicate with each other correctly?

I guess that's why some say to focus on dealing with the symptoms if you're an old timer. New timers still have time to be great again.

SarahSmile0205 08-26-2014 10:46 AM

Is there any stem cell research going on?

Lightrail11 08-26-2014 10:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by markneil1212 (Post 1091631)
thanks for the extra info. I wonder, even if they could be created on a large scale, what about the damaged ones? the damage to my thalamus causes all kinds of autonomic problems. Wouldn't those old cells have to be disposed of as well as new ones being created.

And for a function like sleep, wouldn't the different brain parts have to learn how to communicate with each other correctly?

I guess that's why some say to focus on dealing with the symptoms if you're an old timer. New timers still have time to be great again.

I'm not a neuroscientist but as I understand it, neuroplasticity more involves reestablishing neural pathways and connections that it does generating new neurons. So the connections bypass the damaged ones and reestablish new ones.

Some interesting discussions and fascinating case studies are in the book "The Brain that Changes Itself" by Norman Doidge, M.D.


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