
Demystifying Brain Injury
Traumatic brain injury (known as TBI) results from a violent blow, jolt to the head, or an object that penetrates brain tissue. This hit or jolt to the head causes the brain to move inside the skull or damages the skull. In turn, it causes the destruction of brain cells and impairs the function for which that part of the brain is responsible.
An injury to the front of the brain might impact problem solving or planning skills.
An injury to the back of the brain might impact sight, language, or body awareness.
There are three external “mechanisms” that cause traumatic brain injury.
- Open head injury – injuries from bullet wounds and other penetrating objects.
- Closed head injury – a result of a fall or car crash where nothing penetrated your brain but you sustained significant head trauma.
- Deceleration injury – when your brain is shaken inside your skull, as often happens in sports injuries.
Treatment
Brain injury is unpredictable in its consequences and impacts everyone differently. After diagnosis, treatment for brain injury may include some combination of surgery, medication, and rehabilitation therapies, like speech therapy, cognitive therapy, physical therapy or occupational therapy.
The goal of brain rehabilitation therapy is to recover lost skills of daily living and maximize independence.
Fast Facts
- 1.5 million people sustain a brain injury each year
- 5.3 million men, women, and children are currently recovering from or living with a TBI in the U.S.
- Most common causes: automobile accidents, violence, falls.
Get the guide
Latest from the Brainwire blog
A guide to gifts for brain injury and stroke survivors (and the clinicians who care for them!)
In celebration of all the summer birthdays around here, we decided to update our official gift guide to include a few new items you can gift all year long! This guide to gifts for brain injury and stroke survivors has even more suggestions for the stumped shopper. ...
Hemiplegia: Causes and Treatments for Partial Paralysis
Hemiplegia, a type of partial paralysis, is a serious medical condition that can severely impact daily life. Whether caused by a brain injury, stroke, or other factors, hemiplegia can have severe impacts on mobility, muscle strength, and coordination. This article will explore the causes, symptoms, and treatments of partial paralysis.
Top Aphasia FAQs Answered by an SLP
Recently, Constant Therapy looked into the most commonly searched questions about aphasia on Google. While the first few questions were rather obvious, some of the latter searches may surprise you. We put CT resident speech-language pathologist, Zach Smith, to the test and asked him these top aphasia FAQs.
Watch how-to videos
FOR PATIENTS
$
Need help? Contact the Support team
$