C J Long

CONTENTS
Series Overview
Predoctoral Training
The UM Program
References
Mental Status
Test Reviews
General Screening Devices
Test Batteries
Localization
Dysfunction
Age Norms for HRB
Report Outline
Sample Report
Misconceptions
| General Motor Association Cortex | <--- | General Sensory Association Cortex |
|---|---|---|
| V | ^ | |
| Motor Association Cortex | Sensory Association Cortex | |
| V | ^ | |
| Motor Strip | Sensory Projection Cortex | |
| V | ^ | |
| Motor Neuron Pool | Thalamus | |
| V | ^ | |
| Effectors (muscles & glands) | Receptors |
Basic Information
Mechanics of Traumatic Brain Injury
Post-Traumatic Amnesia
| Length PTA | Russell 35 | Alternate | Cognitive Recovery | Full Recovery |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| < 5 min | - | Minim | 1 mo | 1 mo |
| 5-60 min | Mild | V mild | 1-3 mo | 3 mo |
| 1-24 hrs | Mod | Mild | 3-6 mo | 1 yr |
| 1-7 days | Severe | Mod | 6-12 mo | 1-2 yrs |
| 8-28 days | V Sev | Severe | 12-24 mo | Residual |
| > 28 days | V Sev | V Sev | +24 mo | Residual |
Consequences of Mild Head Injury
| RECOVERY figure |
CASE 1:
This 26 year-old male was involved in a head-on collision 3 months ago. It was estimated that he was unconscious less than 10 minutes as he remembers being removed from the car. He was taken to the Hospital ER and released after 3 hours. Prior history reveals left-sided hemiparesis, since birth, as a result of cerebral palsy. He graduated from high school but had problems with attention and concentration which persist. Since the accident he reports problems with memory. He has attended college but presently works part-time in pizza delivery.
Test Findings: Low-average IQ (82), long-term memory(76%); high-average short-term memory (112). Cognitive functions are mildly impaired and strongly lateralized to the right hemisphere. No significant problems with emotional adjustment.
Conclusions: Patient suffered a minimal to very-mild TBI with recovery expected within 1 to 2 months. Present level of function appears to be at or near his premorbid level. Findings suggest recovery delayed somewhat due to interaction of TBI effects with pre-existing impairment.(26032)
CASE 2:
This 70 year-old lady was involved in a motor vehicle accident when her car was rear-ended by another driver two years ago. She experienced no coma or PTA and did not seek medical treatment for 2 weeks. She sought treatment at that time for impaired memory and concentration, headaches and dizziness, and loss of energy. She was diagnosed as suffering a concussion and was referred for further diagnostic studies.
Test Findings: Diagnostic tests reveal normal MRI. A neuropsychological evaluation, without age corrected norms, revealed mild generalized cerebral dysfunction thought to be secondary to her TBI. She was referred for a second opinion and again diagnosed as suffering from post-concussion syndrome. Test data also revealed moderate depression and anxiety.
Further investigation of this case revealed that since the accident, she continued to manage her business and that her mother had been killed in a similar MVA 1 week before. Age corrected norms revealed generally normal range of functioning.
Conclusions: This lady did not suffer from TBI. Weaknesses noted could have resulted from other factors.
CASE 3:
A 40-year-old man with 12 yrs education had trouble remembering daily events and has become highly distractible. Patient states that he experiences frequent occurrences where he "walks in their room and does not know why he was there" and forgets work activities from one day to the next. He denies sensory or motor problems but reports occasional pains in his neck, mild experiences with vertigo, hearing loss in his right ear, and occasional sleep disturbance.
Test Findings: Average IQ (112), superior short-term memory (143), and average long-term memory (86%). Performance on all tasks of higher cortical function fell within the normal range. In contrast, the results of personality assessment revealed marked depression and anxiety.
Treatment recommendation: Appropriate chemotherapy and supportive counseling aimed at developing more effective coping strategies.
| functional unit | psychosensory functions | psychomotor functions |
| perceptual motor functions | integrative functions | dysfunction |
| lateralization | localization | centrifugal forces |
| post-concussion symptoms | post-traumatic amnesia | Glasgow coma scale |
| minor head injury |