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What Is Traumatic Brain Injury?
Traumatic brain injury is sudden physical damage to the brain. The
damage may be caused by the head forcefully hitting an object such as
the dashboard of a car (closed head injury) or by something passing
through the skull and piercing the brain, as in a gunshot wound (penetrating
head injury). The major causes of head trauma are motor vehicle accidents.
Other causes include falls, sports injuries, violent crimes, and child
abuse.
The physical, behavioral, or mental changes that may result from head
trauma depend on the areas of the brain that are injured. Most injuries
cause focal brain damage, damage confined to a small area of the brain.
The focal damage is most often at the point where the head hits an object
or where an object, such as a bullet, enters the brain.
In addition to focal damage, closed head injuries frequently cause
diffuse brain injuries or damage to several other areas of the brain.
The diffuse damage occurs when the impact of the injury causes the brain
to move back and forth against the inside of the bony skull. The frontal
and temporal lobes of the brain, the major speech and language areas,
often receive the most damage in this way because they sit in pockets
of the skull that allow more room for the brain to shift and sustain
injury. Because these major speech and language areas often receive
damage, communication difficulties frequently occur following closed
head injuries. Other problems may include voice, swallowing, walking,
balance, and coordination difficulties, as well as changes in the ability
to smell and in memory and cognitive (or thinking) skills.
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Who Suffers From Head Trauma?
Head trauma can affect anyone at any age. Males who are between 15
and 24 years of age have been more vulnerable because of their high-risk
lifestyles. Young children and individuals over 75 years of age are
also more susceptible to head injury. Falls around the home are the
leading cause of injury for infants, toddlers, and elderly people. Violent
shaking of an infant or toddler is another significant cause. The leading
causes for adolescents and adults are automobile and motorcycle accidents,
but injuries that occur during violent crimes are also a major source.
Approximately 200,000 Americans die each year from their injuries.
An additional half million or more are hospitalized. About 10 percent
of the surviving individuals have mild to moderate problems that threaten
their ability to live independently. Another 200,000 have serious problems
that may require institutionalization or some other form of close supervision.
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What Are the Cognitive and Communication Problems That Result From
Traumatic Brain Injury?
Cognitive and communication problems that result from traumatic brain
injury vary from person to person. These problems depend on many factors
which include an individual's personality, preinjury abilities, and
the severity of the brain damage.
The effects of the brain damage are generally greatest immediately
following the injury. However, some effects from traumatic brain injury
may be misleading. The newly injured brain often suffers temporary damage
from swelling and a form of "bruising" called contusions.
These types of damage are usually not permanent and the functions of
those areas of the brain return once the swelling or bruising goes away.
Therefore, it is difficult to predict accurately the extent of long-term
problems in the first weeks following traumatic brain injury.
Focal damage, however, may result in long-term, permanent difficulties.
Improvements can occur as other areas of the brain learn to take over
the function of the damaged areas. Children's brains are much more capable
of this flexibility than are the brains of adults. For this reason,
children who suffer brain trauma might progress better than adults with
similar damage.
In moderate to severe injuries, the swelling may cause pressure on
a lower part of the brain called the brainstem, which controls consciousness
or wakefulness. Many individuals who suffer these types of injuries
are in an unconscious state called a coma. A person in a coma may be
completely unresponsive to any type of stimulation such as loud noises,
pain, or smells. Others may move, make noise, or respond to pain but
be unaware of their surroundings. These people are unable to communicate.
Some people recover from a coma, becoming alert and able to communicate.
In conscious individuals, cognitive impairments often include having
problems concentrating for varying periods of time, having trouble organizing
thoughts, and becoming easily confused or forgetful. Some individuals
will experience difficulty learning new information. Still others will
be unable to interpret the actions of others and therefore have great
problems in social situations. For these individuals, what they say
or what they do is often inappropriate for the situation. Many will
experience difficulty solving problems, making decisions, and planning.
Judgment is often affected.
Language problems also vary. Problems often include word-finding difficulty,
poor sentence formation, and lengthy and often faulty descriptions or
explanations. These are to cover for a lack of understanding or inability
to think of a word. For example, when asking for help finding a belt
while dressing, an individual may ask for "the circular cow thing
that I used yesterday and before."
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Traumatic brain injury is sudden physical damage to the brain
Many have difficulty understanding multiple meanings in jokes, sarcasm,
and adages or figurative expressions such as, "A rolling stone
gathers no moss" or "Take a flying leap." Individuals
with traumatic brain injuries are often unaware of their errors and
can become frustrated or angry and place the blame for communication
difficulties on the person to whom they are speaking. Reading and writing
abilities are often worse than those for speaking and understanding
spoken words. Simple and complex mathematical abilities are often affected.
The speech produced by a person who has traumatic brain injury may
be slow, slurred, and difficult or impossible to understand if the areas
of the brain that control the muscles of the speech mechanism are damaged.
This type of speech problem is called dysarthria. These individuals
may also experience problems swallowing. This is called dysphagia. Others
may have what is called apraxia of speech, a condition in which strength
and coordination of the speech muscles are unimpaired but the individual
experiences difficulty saying words correctly in a consistent way. For
example, someone may repeatedly stumble on the word "tomorrow"
when asked to repeat it, but then be able to say it in a statement such
as, "I'll try to say it again tomorrow."
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How Are the Cognitive and Communication Problems Assessed?
The assessment of cognitive and communication problems is a continual,
ongoing process that involves a number of professionals. Immediately
following the injury, a neurologist (a physician who specializes in
nervous system disorders) or another physician may conduct an informal,
bedside evaluation of attention, memory, and the ability to understand
and speak. Once the person's physical condition has stabilized, a speech-language
pathologist may evaluate cognitive and communication skills, and a neuropsychologist
may evaluate other cognitive and behavioral abilities. Occupational
therapists also assess cognitive skills related to the individual's
ability to perform "activities of daily living" (ADL) such
as dressing or preparing meals. An audiologist should assess hearing.
All assessments continue at frequent intervals during the rehabilitative
process so that progress can be documented and treatment plans updated.
The rehabilitative process may last for several months to a year.
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How Are the Cognitive and Communication Problems Treated?
The cognitive and communication problems of traumatic brain injury
are best treated early, often beginning while the individual is still
in the hospital. This early therapy will frequently center on increasing
skills of alertness and attention. They will focus on improving orientation
to person, place, time, and situation, and stimulating speech understanding.
The therapist will provide oral-motor exercises in cases where the individual
has speech and swallowing problems.
Longer term rehabilitation may be performed individually, in groups,
or both, depending upon the needs of the individual. This therapy often
occurs in a rehabilitation facility designed specifically for the treatment
of individuals with traumatic brain injury. This type of setting allows
for intensive therapy by speech-language pathologists, physical therapists,
occupational therapists, and neuropsychologists at a time when the individual
can best benefit from such intensive therapy. Other individuals may
receive therapy at home by visiting therapists or on an outpatient basis
at a hospital, medical center, or rehabilitation facility.
The goal of rehabilitation is to help the individual progress to the
most independent level of functioning possible. For some, ability to
express needs verbally in simple terms may be a goal. For others, the
goal may be to express needs by pointing to pictures. For still others,
the goal of therapy may be to improve the ability to define words or
describe consequences of actions or events.
Therapy will focus on regaining lost skills as well as learning ways
to compensate for abilities that have been permanently changed because
of the brain injury. Most individuals respond best to programs tailored
to their backgrounds and interests. The most effective therapy programs
involve family members who can best provide this information. Computer-assisted
programs have been successful with some individuals.
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What Research Is Being Done for the Cognitive and Communication Problems
Caused by Traumatic Brain Injury?
Researchers are studying many issues related to the special cognitive
and communication problems experienced by individuals who have traumatic
brain injuries. Scientists are designing new evaluation tools to assess
the special problems that children who have suffered traumatic brain
injuries encounter. Because the brain of a child is vastly different
from the brain of an adult, scientists are also examining the effects
of various treatment methods that have been developed specifically for
children. These new strategies include the use of computer programs.
In addition, research is examining the effects of some medications on
the recovery of speech, language, and cognitive abilities following
traumatic brain injury.
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Where Can I Get Additional Information?
Tustin Speech & Language Center
661 West First Street, Suite E
Tustin, CA 92780
Phone: (714)-838-2853
Info@TustinSpeech.com
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders
www.nidcd.nih.gov
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Information Source ...
Compliments of |
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National Institute on Deafness and
Other Communication Disorders
www.nidcd.nih.gov
Featuring:
Traumatic Brain Injury:
Cognitive and Communication Disorders
NIH Pub. No. 98-4315
July 1998
Contact information updated February 2002 |
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Tustin Speech & Language Center |
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would like more information, or you would like to schedule
a free consultation, please do not hesitate to call ...
(714) 838-2853 |
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