When you woke up today, you thought this
was like any other Friday. You’re on your way to work, and traffic is flowing smoother
than normal. Suddenly, someone crashes
into the back end of your car and you feel your head extend back over the
headrest and then rebound forwards, almost hitting the steering with your
forehead. It all happened so fast. After a few minutes, you notice your neck
and head starting to hurt in a way you’ve not previously felt. When the police arrive and start asking
questions about what had happened, you try to piece together what happened but
you’re not quite sure of the sequence of events. Your memory just isn’t that clear. Within the
first few days, in addition to significant neck and headache pain, you notice
your memory seems fuzzy, and you easily lose your train of thought. Everything
seems like an effort and you notice you’re quite irritable. When your
chiropractor asks you if you’ve felt any of these symptoms, you look at them
and say, "…how did you know? I just thought I was having a bad day – I
didn’t know whiplash could cause these symptoms!"
Because these symptoms are often subtle and non-specific,
it’s quite normal for patients not to complain about them. In fact, we almost
always have to describe the symptoms and ask if any of these symptoms “sound
familiar” to the patient.
As pointed out above, patients with Mild Traumatic Brain
Injury (MTBI) don’t mention any of the previously described symptoms and in
fact, may be embarrassed to discuss these symptoms with their chiropractor or
physician when they first present after a car crash. This is because the symptoms are vague and
hard to describe and, many feel the symptoms are caused by simply being tired
or perhaps upset about the accident.
When directly asked if any of these symptoms exist, the patient is often
surprised there is an actual reason for feeling this way.
The cause of MTBI is due to the brain
actually bouncing or rebounding off the inner walls of the bony skull during
the “whiplash” process, when the head is forced back and forth after the
impact. During that process, the brain which is suspended inside our skull, is
forced forwards and literally ricochets off the skull and damages some of the
nerve cells most commonly of either the brain stem (the part connected to the
spinal cord), the frontal lobe (the part behind the forehead) and/or the
temporal lobe (the part of the brain located on the side of the head).
Depending on the direction and degree of force generated by the collision
(front end, side impact or rear end collision), the area of the brain that may be
damaged varies as it could be the area closest to initial impact or, the area
on the opposite side, due to the rebound effect. Depending on which part of the
brain is injured, the physical findings may include problems with walking,
balance, coordination, strength/endurance, as well as difficulties with
communicating (“cognitive deficits”), processing information, memory, and
altered psychological functions.
The good news is that most of these
injuries will recover within 3-12 months but unfortunately, not all do and in
these cases, the term, “post-concussive syndrome” is sometimes used.
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