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Understanding Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI). Introduction. What is TBI? How does it occur? Who typically experiences a TBI? How does a normal brain function? What changes emerge after a TBI?. This presentation is an attempt to provide information about traumatic brain injury.
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Introduction • What is TBI? • How does it occur? • Who typically experiences a TBI? • How does a normal brain function? • What changes emerge after a TBI? This presentation is an attempt to provide information about traumatic brain injury. The “normal” workings of the brain will be discussed, and changes that emerge after a traumatic brain injury.
Traumatic Brain Injury is… • Injury to the head from a blunt or penetrating object or even shockwave from a blast. • Injury from rapid movement of the head that causes back and forth movement inside the skull.
Traumatic Brain Injury Is Not... • A new onset mental disorder • Just emotional stress • An acquired mental retardation • The effects of prolonged drug/alcohol abuse TBI is often misdiagnosed. Typically, the person and their family will describe “sudden” changes in the person’s mood, emotional control or thinking abilities; however, they will mislabel the reason.
Traumatic Brain Injury Overview • Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), often called the signature wound of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, occurs when a sudden trauma or head injury disrupts the function of the brain. • Common causes of TBI include damage caused by explosive devices, falls and vehicle or motorcycle accidents. Most reported TBI among Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom service members and veterans has been traced back to Improvised Explosive Devices, or IEDs, used extensively against Coalition Forces.
Range of Symptoms • Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (MTBI), commonly referred to as a concussion, is a brief loss of consciousness or disorientation ranging up to 30 minutes. • MTBI include headache, confusion, lightheadedness, dizziness, blurred vision or tired eyes, ringing in the ears, bad taste in the mouth, fatigue or lethargy, a change in sleep patterns, behavioral or mood changes, and trouble with memory, concentration or attention. • Moderate TBI includes a population of patients that falls between the mild and severe spectrum. Moderate TBI patients have the most variability in the clinical presentation picture. • There is usually loss of consciousness, from an hour to a day; there can be confusion for days to weeks; and mental or physical deficits that can last months or be permanent.
Cont: Range of Symptoms • Severe Traumatic Brain Injury is associated with loss of consciousness for over 30 minutes, or amnesia. • Symptoms of Severe TBI include all those of MTBI, as well as headaches that gets worse or do not go away, repeated vomiting or nausea, convulsions or seizures, inability to awaken from sleep, dilation of one or both pupils of the eyes, slurred speech, weakness or numbness in the extremities, loss of coordination, and increased confusion, restlessness, or agitation.
Why is TBI a “Silent Epidemic”? • Most individuals don’t know about brain injury, let alone its consequences or impact on behavior • Minor blows to the head or “concussions” are often not perceived as “brain injuries”, yet 15% of these individuals will have chronic problems post injury • Most people assume one needs to lose consciousness to have a brain injury
Causes of TBI General Population Other 7% Sports/Recreation10% Firearms/ IEDs/Shock Wave Blasts12% Vehicle Crashes50% Falls21%
Blow to the head with any object Causes of TBI Pushed against the wall or other solid object Strenuous shaking of body Punched in the face Falling and hitting your head Firearms/ IEDs/Shock Wave Blasts Strangled Near drowning
TBI Gender Males are two times more likely than females to sustain a brain injury. Depending on the injury, a severe TBI could impact speech, sensory, vision and cognitive deficits including difficulties with attention, memory, concentration, and impulsiveness.
Mild TBI/Concussion • 85% have full recovery within 3-6 months post event. • 15% experience chronic symptoms which significantly interfere with their daily functioning. While most individuals recover from a mild TBI, about 15% of individuals will experience chronic symptoms which interfere with their day to day functioning.
Risk of Repeat Brain Injuries • After 1st TBI, risk of second injury is 3 times greater • After 2nd, risk of third injury is 8 times greater • Once an individuals experiences one TBI, they are at increased risk of having another TBI. • The risk of repeat injury increased geometrically with each subsequent injury. • Why? The theory is that several things may be happening after a TBI… • Reaction time is slower • Judgment is off • Inattention- (not paying attention)
Head is hit the first time Head hit a Second time Each time the head is hit, injuries accummulate
AS HEAD INJURIES ACCUMULATE… symptoms increase
Changes after a Brain Injury A brain injury affects who we are, the way we think, act and feel. It changes everything about ourselves in a matter of seconds.
In TBI, there is greater damage to the frontal and temporal lobes of the brain.
Frontal Lobe Functions • Planning/anticipation/initiation • Problem solving/judgement • Awareness • Mental flexibility • Ability to inhibit responses • Personality/ emotions
Temporal Lobe Functions • Memory and learning • Organizing and sequencing • Hearing • Understanding language
Physical Problems • Overall slowing • Clumsiness • Decreased vision/hearing/smell • Dizziness • Headaches • Fatigue • Increased sensitivity to noise/bright lights
Thinking Changes • Attention • Reduced concentration • Reduced visual attention • Inability to divide attention between competing tasks • Processing speed • Slow thinking • Slow reading • Slow verbal and written responses
Thinking Changes • Communication • Difficulty finding the right words, naming objects • Disorganized in communication • Learning and Memory • Information before TBI intact • Reduced ability to remember new information • Problems with learning new skills
Thinking Changes in “Executive Functioning” Difficulty planning/ setting goals Difficulty problem solving Problems being organized Difficulty prioritizing Decreased awareness of thinking changes in self Difficulty being flexible
Combined TBI Changes • Having difficulty remembering or learning new information. • Being inconsistent in performance. • Having poor judgment and decision making abilities. • Having difficulty generalizing to new situations. • Lacking awareness of these difficulties.
Emotional/Behavioral/Social Changes Increased impulsivity Anxiety Depression Rebellious Irritability/ agitation Difficulty with self initiation Socially inappropriate behavior Impatience Intolerant Inability to get along with others Rapid loss of emotional control (short fuse) Before-after contrasts Increased risk taking Self-monitoring Increased self focus
Long Term Challenges Post TBI • Vocational and/or school failure • Family life/social relationships collapse • Increased financial burden on families and social service systems • Alcohol and drug abuse • Chronic depression/anxiety
Ratings for traumatic brain injury are complicated: • Injuries to veterans serving in Iraq or Afghanistan resulting from roadside explosions and other concussive blasts have led to more brain injuries than in other wars. • A disability rating would be determined by evaluating physical, emotional and cognitive behavior, with ratings based on the cumulative result of the evaluations. • Physical problems could include pain, hearing loss and speech problems. Cognitive behavior would include decision making, judgment and social interaction.