TBI Statistics
TBI Overview
TBI Rehabilitation
Cognitive-Communicative Impairments
TBI Treatment
100

What is the leading cause of TBI?

Falls (40%, 2006-2010)

100

What is a TBI?

A craniocerebral injury from an external mechaniccal force in the form of a bump, blow, or jolt to the head. Causes temporary or permanent brain function impairment

100

What is the general prognosis for comas? For example:

Severe disability "unlikely" with a coma what length?

Positive recovery "unlikely" with a coma of what length?

Severe disability "unlikely" with a coma <2 weeks

Positive recovery "unlikely" with a coma of >4 weeks

100

There are several factors related to one's ability to attain pre-injury status. What are three factors?

Support system

Personality

Severity of TBI

Pre-injury abilities

100

What is the scope of practice for the SLP when treating TBI?

Treatment of cognitive processes as they relate to communicative behavior and language

200

T/F: TBI survivors experience many years' worth of lasting effects (long-term consequences) only.

False! Survivors can experience effects over a short duration of time as well (several days)

200

Name three symptoms of TBI.

Altered consciousness

Amnesia

Skull fractures

Intracranial lesions

Death

200

T/F: When compared to less-dependent patients, more dependent patients make more progress and also remain more dependent at discharge.

True!

200

What is a coma?

State of unconsciousness, eyes closed, patient does not wake (brainstem, thalamic implications)

200

Name two forms of standardized assessment for individuals with TBI.

WAB

Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function

300

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+123,456,789 points

300

What is the name for TBI injuries sustained by military elements including grenades, gunshots etc?

Blast injuries

300

Name three types of disruption that older adolescents and young adult males experience with TBI.

Educational disruptions

Vocational disruptions

Social disruptions

300

Cognitive impairments may affect several areas. What are three of them?

Orientation (frontal lobe)

Communication (frontal lobe, language areas)

Attention/concentration (thalamo-frontal pathways)

Memory (hippocampal, thalamic, frontal)

Executive functioning (prefrontal cortex, cortical-subcortical pathways)

Anosognosia

Behavioral (orbitofrontal cortex, amygdala)

300

Name a form of non-standardized assessment for individuals with TBI.

Discourse analysis (monologue or conversational)


400

Name two other causes of TBI.

Assault

Unintentional blunt trauma


400

Name two TBI severity scales.

Glasgow Coma Scale (15-point scale based on eye opening verbal responses, and motor responses)

Abbreviated Injury Scale (ranking injuries from minor --> unsurvivable, estimates threat to life)

400

Name two factors of a TBI that are associated with a poorer prognosis/outcome.

Depth of lesion (deeper = poorer outcome)

Lower GCS score = poorer outcome

Coma greater than 4 weeks in length = poorer outcome

Age (65+ = poorer outcome)

400
What is anosognosia?

When someone is unaware that a disorder/impairment is present

400

Name two forms of treatment for individuals with TBI.

Attention training

Use of external memory aids

Executive function training

500

TBIs are the cause of what percentage of injury related deaths (2010)?

30%

500

Give one example of primary injury damage and one example of secondary/post-injury damage with TBI.

Primary injury damage: Cortical effects, axonal injury, vascular injury

Secondary injury damage: Ischemia, edema, further axonal injury

500

After entering emergency medical care, TBI patients will hopefully then be discharged to one of three settings. What are they?

Inpatient rehab (still at the hospital)

Subacute care/subacute rehab

Home

500

What are the three cognitive impairments resulting from TBI that have frontal lobe implications?

Orientation

Communication

Memory

500

Explain why we need to practice caution when using standardized assessments of individuals with TBI.

It's very context-based; goals and tools needed will change depending on the stage of rehabilitation of the individual. Lots of factors need to be considered in order to have accurate context (premorbid factors, stage of recovery, personality, etc.)