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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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There is a lot of talk on here about neuropsych assessments.
I went to a neuropsychologist a few times, and she administered the IMPACT on the computer. I got the results 5 minutes later and we discussed them. Is that what everyone is talking about? I wonder if there is something more because some people are waiting a few days for evaluations. Like a more in-depth type of assessment.
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About me: Married 45yo mother of two girls. In July 2014, I hit my head on the side of the pool; since then I've had 3 lesser concussions, one of which was due to MVA. For the 5-10 years prior to that I’ve had what I now realize were possibly 20+ undiagnosed concussions or sub-concussions. Likely most of these result from Duane's Syndrome, for which I now have prism glasses. Have successfully done vestibular therapy and plan to start vision therapy. Current companions: Significant depression, anxiety, hyperacusis, difficulty with verbal expression (recall & word mixups), mild spacial/vestibular issues. Feelings of disconnect in relationships. |
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#2 | ||
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Junior Member
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My neuropsych was much different than that. It started out as two appointments about 1 hour in length with me giving detailed history from education-medical-family relationships. Then i took a test that was a few hundred questions about my personality. Then I went back a few months later and the real test began. The first day was 9 hours long and the second day was three hours.
Then I waited about a month and had about an hour discussion on the results and what they meant and where we were going to go from there. It took about another 8 months for the actual report to be sent to me where it went into even more detail about my issues and what requirements I will need at school etc. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | AndromedaJulie (03-31-2015) |
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#3 | ||
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Legendary
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Like RJam said, a normal full battery NeuroPsych Assessment (NPA) takes from a few hours to 8 to even 16 hours, depending on which subtests are done. The report should be available about a month later.
The ImPACT test is a very abbreviated NPA with very limited value, especially if there was not a baseline done before the head injury. An NPA report will indicate the various brain functioning levels compared to the rest of the population. Visual and auditory immediate and short term memory, executive functioning, motor response time, verbal processing, and many more functions can be tested and scored. An NPA can get very expensive, $4000 is not uncommon. And, insurance will usually want an strong reason for the referral for the NPA. An NPA can be a two headed monster, one good, one not so good. It can put a diagnosis to our struggles making them real. But, at the same times, when we understand the reality of our injury and dysfunctions, we can often stop second guessing and doubting ourselves. No more "Am I going nuts ? Is this all just in my head ?" Not all neuro psychologist are the same. Some have a bias against concussions causing long term symptoms and try to say we are just depressed or malingering (making things up). So, it helps to find a good, objective neuro psychologist. One directly affiliated with a brain injury rehabilitation hospital or clinic would likely be a good start. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | AndromedaJulie (03-31-2015) |
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#4 | ||
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Junior Member
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Thanks. This makes sense. We actually had that full assessment done for our older daughter a few years ago, now I realize.
I think for me, it probably isn't necessary (or affordable) at this point. I'm not sure I need more defining. Just more healing.
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About me: Married 45yo mother of two girls. In July 2014, I hit my head on the side of the pool; since then I've had 3 lesser concussions, one of which was due to MVA. For the 5-10 years prior to that I’ve had what I now realize were possibly 20+ undiagnosed concussions or sub-concussions. Likely most of these result from Duane's Syndrome, for which I now have prism glasses. Have successfully done vestibular therapy and plan to start vision therapy. Current companions: Significant depression, anxiety, hyperacusis, difficulty with verbal expression (recall & word mixups), mild spacial/vestibular issues. Feelings of disconnect in relationships. |
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#5 | ||
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Junior Member
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Its important to note I live in canada where the cost of the NPA is covered by the government so that may make a difference
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