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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.

Warning: Graphic photo

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Only miracle can save Formula One great Michael Schumacher


 
 

Only miracle can save Formula One great Michael Schumacher

News Corp Australia
Ian Horswill

March 08, 2014 8


IT will be a miracle now.

That is what the family of seven-time Formula One world champion motor driver Michael Schumacher have reportedly been told.

The 45-year-old Schumacher suffered serious brain injuries after hitting a rock in a skiing accident in the French Alpine ski resort of Meribel on December 29 last year.

At Schumacher management’s request, the Grenoble hospital treating him has kept news about his condition to a minimum.

MICHAEL SCHUMACHER: Suffers brain haemorrhage skiing in France

However sources close to his family told The Telegraph UK that Schumacher’s prognosis is bleak. “The family has been told that only a miracle can bring him back now,” a senior German journalist told Telegraph UK.

“He is in a bad way but until the family issues a formal statement, we cannot publish anything,” he added.

Another source added: “Doctors have given it to them straight. Miracles sometimes happen but there is little hope that he will come out of this.”

 

Only miracle can save Schumacher

“All the money in the world cannot fix what has happened to him” ... Michael Schumacher. Source: Supplied

Schumacher has been in an artificially induced coma for 69 days as doctors hope that the slowing down of the brain’s functions has helped it heal more quickly. The majority of artificial comas last for a period of two to three weeks.

This week was two months into his coma. Doctors hoped for a sign that he was aware of his environment via a flutter of eyelids or finger movement beyond a reflex nerve twitch.

Last Sunday Schumacher’s wife Corinna spent her 45th birthday at his bedside with their children Gina Marie and Mick, his brother Ralf and his father Rolf Schumacher.

‘They talked and talked and prayed for him to acknowledge their presence. But he remains comatose with tubes feeding him, supplying him with air, giving him medicine and removing waste from his body,” a source close to the family reportedly said.

‘Miracles happen, of course, and as a wealthy man he has the best care money can buy. But all the money in the world cannot fix what has happened to him.”’

His management team, led by spokeswoman Sabine Kehm, insist that Schumacher remains in the ‘wake up’ phase of his treatment as doctors continue to decrease the powerful narcotics that have kept him unconscious.

Three times daily Schumacher’s joints and muscles are massaged to prevent atrophy and bed sores.

Experts said that the greatest risk of all facing Schumacher in his prone position is pneumonia. The lack of a competent swallowing mechanism can make saliva run into the lungs and trigger the potentially lethal respiratory infection. He has already had — and conquered — one lung infection.

His blood is also thinned to prevent thrombosis and he is regularly turned and even stood straight up at times to keep it flowing.

He lies on a special air-filled mattress to prevent pressure sores and his urinary tract is under constant vigilance because of the danger of waste bacteria entering the bloodstream and causing a potentially fatal infection.

 

A lover of skiing ... Michael Schumacher skiing during a slalom race in Madonna di Campig

A lover of skiing ... Michael Schumacher skiing during a slalom race in Madonna di Campiglio, Italy. Source: AFP

 

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