Friday, September 27, 2013

Traumatic Brain Injury- Intro


Traumatic Brain Injury
Intro

            A traumatic brain injury (TBI) is caused by a bump, blow or jolt to the head. Such occurrences can result in mild to severe damage to the brain. When a traumatic brain injury is sustained prior to the age of 22, an individual may then also be diagnosed with mental retardation, (MR). The mental retardation caused can range from mild to profound, depending on the trauma the brain had gone through. For a diagnosis of mental retardation as a result of a TBI, the damage must be permanent and severe enough to affect the individual’s IQ as well as areas of daily living. A TBI can affect thinking, emotion, sensation and language. Aside from mental retardation, a TBI could also cause other neurological disorders with age, such as epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease and other brain disorders. At least 1.7 million TBI’s occur each year. Children ages 0-4, teens ages 15-19 and adults over the age of 65 are most likely to sustain a TBI.
            I have worked with developmentally disabled adults for the last ten years in both residential and community programs. Every case and every disability is sad and difficult to accept and understand. In my opinion, the saddest is a case of MR in an individual that occurred in the late teen years of life. People who have suffered a TBI at this stage of life may have an understanding of what life was like before the injury. By this stage in life, the person has experienced things, built relationships and started a life as a person without a disability. Although in some cases, the person may have no memory of their life prior to the injury, many times the person does remember. They may lose their short-term memory, daily living skills they learned as a child and even the capability of performing simple tasks such as dressing or showering independently, but still remember what it was like when they were able to do these things.
            The link below has more information on the causes of a traumatic brain injury, the potential effects and the statistics of such.

6 comments:

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  2. Very informational, great start. I like the link!

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  3. Hey David, really nice intro! I knew you worked in the field but I didn't know it was for so long! In your opinion do you think its "easier" to re-teach activities of daily living to this age group of teens that have a TBI because they have a sense for what life was like?

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    1. Thanks Kaitlin! No, it is not at all easier in my opinion. In my next blog you will read about some behavior issues associated with individuals who have MR as a result of a TBI. I think it is even more difficult to assist with daily living skills due to some of the deficits one incurs after a TBI. They may be unable to complete a task due to physical limitations or tremors. Then they tend to get more frustrated because it is a task they may remember having the ability to complete. Read the next entry this week. :)

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  5. thank you david for your very informative infomation on traumatic brain injury. it is such a sad thing to have to deal with a disability late in life when it did not happen at birth or very young. but it is goo to know that with medication, therapy amd most of all the suport of family and conmunity supports, this disability can be improved at different levels.

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