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


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Old 05-10-2015, 12:50 AM #11
Mark in Idaho Mark in Idaho is offline
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The low inflammatory aspect of the Paleo diet may help for those who have an inflammation based symptomology. It sounds extreme for most to adopt.
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Old 05-10-2015, 10:57 AM #12
BDNF BDNF is offline
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Anyway, regarding exercise, there's countless studies done on mice where they gave the mice a tbi and split them in to an exercise group or non exercise group and the mice that exercise fair a whole lot better than the non exercise mice.

If you wanna see for yourself go on ** and search exercise tbi.
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Old 05-10-2015, 12:38 PM #13
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BDNF,

Firstly, humans are not mice. Many/most TBI sufferers also suffer from mobility impairments and other disabilities after their accident.

While I have looked at the studies and scholarly papers, I find an overriding caveat - that exercise should be 'safe', built up gradually and started under the care of a Physician.

I point you in the direction of the Paper: Exercise After TBI: Is It A Double-Edged Sword? By Grace Griesbach PhD. Here is a clip from the Summary:

Quote
Results of human and animal studies suggest that premature postconcussive exercise may be deleterious by exacerbating postconcussive symptomatology and disrupting restorative processes. A better understanding of the mechanisms that influence exercise after TBI will contribute to improving guidelines for the return to exercise activities and to the successful use of exercise as a therapeutic tool.
Quote.

I am an ABI sufferer, with a large lesion in the Occipital part of my brain causing double vision, and multiple White Matter Lesions throughout my brain shown by MRI. I am currently waiting for results to be forwarded and interpreted by a second Dr as my Neuro was less than forthcoming. I have multiple spine/neck/cord injuries, Neurological Hypersensitivity and heart issues which mean I cannot exercise, and while I take certain vitamins, high doses and D supplements are closed to me due to contra-indications.

Yet I would love to be able to do everything to protect - even improve the health - of my brain. It is where 'I' live. That is what every Member here feels, they come seeking advice and knowledge and reassurance that they are going to recover from the terrible event that brought them here. Don't think everyone sits and lets the World wash over them. Being a Member of this wonderful Forum, linking up with peers, is often the start of the fight back to recovery.

Dave.
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Old 05-11-2015, 04:28 AM #14
SuperElectric SuperElectric is offline
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I don't believe there are any magic quick fixes or sure fire ways to get over tbi, only rest, light exercise and a healthy varied diet high in fresh vegetables and fruit help. Having a positive mental outlook, which isn't always easy, helps the brain repair too. The body needs time to heal and that's all there is to it.
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Concussion 28-02-2014 head butted a door edge.
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Symptoms overcome: Nausea, head pressure, debilitating fatigue, jelly legs, raised pulse rate, night sweats, restlessness, depersonalisation, anxiety, neck ache, depression.
Symptoms left: Disturbed sleep, some residual tinnitus.
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Old 05-12-2015, 09:00 AM #15
RidingRollerCoaster RidingRollerCoaster is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mark in Idaho View Post
The low inflammatory aspect of the Paleo diet may help for those who have an inflammation based symptomology. It sounds extreme for most to adopt.

Hi Mark

I am wondering what you mean by "an inflammation based symptomology"? What would those symptoms entail? I am curious because I often think that a lot of my symptoms are due to inflammation but can't be sure.

Thanks and take care.
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Injury: March 2014. Hit hard on top of head by heavy metal farm tool. LOC. MRIs and Cat Scans clear. PCS ever since. 33 year old female. Trying to stay positive!

Persisting Problems:
fatigue, dizziness, lightheadedness, vestibular balance and vision problems, vision static, tinnitus, hearing loss, slight sensitivity to noise, sometimes the insomnia comes back, sensitivity to stress, exercise intolerance, emotional problems - But I still have much to be thankful for.
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