Epidemiology and Location
Pathophysiology and Recovery Mech.
Acronyms
Disorders
Potpourri
100

Executive functioning is controlled by this lobe of the brain.

What is the frontal lobe?

100
This type of primary injury is defined as bruising of the cortical tissue.
What are contusions?
100

CCC

What is Coup - Contrecoup?

100

This structure is composed of cell bodies mainly in the midbrain that projects to widespread areas of the cerebral cortex via both thalamic and extra-thalamic pathways and controls consciousness and arousal level.

What is the ascending reticular activating system?

100

Inter-cranial pressure levels up to mm Hg considered harmless.

What is 15 mm hg?

200

This was the most common cause of death and injury in automobile accidents in 1990.

What is ejection of the occupant from the vehicle?

200

This primary injury is defined as immediate disruption of the axons due to acceleration-deceleration and rotational forces that cause shearing upon impact.

What is diffuse axonal injury?

200

PTA

What is Post Traumatic Amnesia?

200

A patient with a recent TBI has eyes closed without spontaneous purposeful movement and on EEG does not have sleep wake cycles. She is in this type of disorders of consciousness.

What is coma?

200

These are two ways to decrease intracranial pressure.

What are elevation of head of bed 30 degrees, osmotic agents, diuretics, hypertonic solutions, hyperventilation, neurosurgical decompression, and hypothermia.

300

This substance is detected in the majority of TBI patients at the time of accident.

What is alcohol?

300

This term describes when a lesion/damage in one region of the CNS can produce altered function in other areas of the brain not damaged or connected to the primary injury site.

What is diaschisis?

300

CDC

What is Center for Disease Control?

300

This term describes when functions are taken over by brain areas that did not originally manage those functions.

What is vicariation?

300

This sport has the highest rate of concussion.

What is football?

400

The lobe of the brain responsible for memory.

What is the temporal lobe?

400

The number of times more likely that a child with a brain injury will have another occurrence.

What is 2X as likely?

400

GCS

What is Glasgow Coma Scale?

400

A 34 year old male had a non-traumatic brain injury 6 weeks ago. For the last 5 weeks, he has had sleep-wake cycles on EEG, but does not have awareness of self or environment. This is referred to as this type of disorder of consciousness, and abbreviated PVS.

What is persistent vegetative state?

400

The percentage of children who have experienced a probable TBI and will become depressed.

What is 40%?

500

This is the overall male to female incidence ratio for TBI.

What is 2-2.5:1?

500

This bone-artery combination is involved in 90% of epidural hematomas.

What is temporal bone - middle meningeal artery?

500

DAI.

What is Diffuse Axonal Injury?

500

The cranial nerve most commonly injured in TBI.

I (Olfactory), III (Oculomotor), IV (Trochlear), VI (Abducens), VII (Facial)


500

The "silent epidemic."

What is TBI?