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Traumatic Brain Injury

Concussion

Brain Injury takes many forms...

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What is Brain Injury?

Brain injury can be a devastating disability, and given the brain’s complexity and the differences in the types, locations, and extent of damage, the effects of a brain injury can be wide and varied. Some occur immediately, and some may take days or even years to appear.

The most common after effects of undiagnosed concussion and head trauma are memory issues, drug and alcohol dependency, anger outbursts family violence,road rage and criminality. Any one of the symptoms can alter or devastate a person’s life, and brain injury is made all the more difficult by the fact that it’s often hard to see and just as often misdiagnosed or dismissed as “personality problems” or a perceived mental disorder. But in fact, it is a serious and legitimate illness where sufferers deserve all the help and support they can get.

© Brain Injury Center 2015

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The Human Brain

The human brain in an incredible thing! It’s one of the most complex and least understood parts of the human body, but science is making new advances every day that tell us more about the brain.

The average human brain is 5.5 inches wide and 3.6 inches high. When we’re born, our brains weigh about 2 pounds, while the adult brain weighs about 3 pounds.

The brain accounts for about 2% of your total body weight, but it uses 20% of your body’s energy!

It sends out more electrical impulses in one day than all the telephones in the world, and it’s estimated that the brain thinks about 70,000 thoughts in a 24-hour period.

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Closed Head Injury

 
Such damage often involves “Diffuse brain injury,” which involves via widespread damage to nerves and blood vessels, twisting and stretching of nerve fibres and bleeding due to the tearing of arteries and veins throughout the brain. The forward motion and rotation of the brain on the relatively fixed brain stem is a common cause of loss of consciousness and coma.
 
In addition to diffuse brain injury, focal lesions and bruising may occur as the brain collides into the inside with the sharp bony inner surface of the skull. Focal lesions can occur, either where the brain makes contact at the site of impact inside the skull (a coup injury), or where it doesn’t  or at a different site (a contrecoup injury, which most often presents opposite the point of impact).
 
Blood vessels or brain tissue can also tear without impact, simply through the force of violent head movement. Because the skull cannot expand, intracranial (inside the skull) bleeding and swelling can’t drain, and any accumulation may eventually press on—and damage—the brain.) which is typically, although not limited to, the opposite side of the skull.
 
Closed head injury injuries are not always easy to spot and may go unnoticed or undiagnosed for several days until symptoms from secondary effects, such as increased pressure inside the skull, become severe enough to cause problems.

This may not be obvious to medical staff in an emergency department, and may not receive appropriate treatment until symptoms become worse over several days or months.

© 2008 BIC