Posts Tagged ‘TBI Attorney’

Steve Gleason and ALS

Monday, October 10th, 2011

The experienced brain injury attorneys of Passen Law Group recently wrote on the research tying ALS, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, to traumatic brain injury (TBI). Today, we share the story of one athlete suffering from TBI-induced ALS: Steve Gleason of the New Orleans Saints.

Steve Gleason is not only a retired football player, he is a local hero, adored by the people of New Orleans. But the very hard-hitting nature of his football career, which endeared him to fans, may now have lead to his debilitating brain disease.

Gleason’s rise to cult-hero status was against all odds. Small and slow for an NFL player, he still earned a scholarship to Washington State University, and one a position in the NFL. Never a starter, he was still an impact player, excelling on special teams, blocking punts, and leading in tackles on special teams plays.

He was also a born leader and giver. Gleason grew out his hair to be cut for the Locks of Love charity. He supported biofuels, even buying a diesel pickup and powering it with biodiesel. He demanded and began a recycling program at the team’s practice facilities.

Gleason retired from the NFL in 2008, after an eight-year career. By early 2011, he had received his ALS diagnosis.

As our brain injury attorneys know, Gleason is far from alone.

About 14 new victims are diagnosed with ALS each day, striking between one and three Americans out of 100,000, most of them men between 40 and 70 years of age (Gleason himself is 34).

ALS, often called Lou Gehrig’s disease, is a progressive, ultimately terminal disease. Over the course of the disease, a victim’s motor neurons stop working. Victims become less able to use or move their muscles, which then atrophy from lack of use. While remaining fully mentally aware and alert, the victim loses the ability to walk, talk, and eventually, even to swallow. Finally, the muscles surrounding the chest wall and lungs shut down, leading to pneumonia or suffocation.

Victims of ALS can often extend their lives, especially if they choose to be placed on a ventilator. But the disease is always progressive, and ultimately fatal. The average lifespan after diagnosis is two to three years.

Although head trauma and ALS have not yet been definitively tied, nor has their link been explained, our experienced brain injury attorneys are convinced by existing research. Italian soccer players, for instance (who suffer repeated head trauma from collisions with the ball and with one another), develop ALS at six times the average rate. NFL players, who experience frequent concussions and more severe forms of TBI, develop the disease at between eight and fifteen times the expected rate. Soldiers exposed to TBI from IED blasts likewise develop ALS at higher-than-expected rates.

The anecdotal evidence is also overwhelming. Some of the most notable victims of ALS developed the disease after suffering head trauma. Lou Gehrig was known for routinely playing through brain and other injuries. Stephen Hawking developed the disease after a concussion resulting from a fall down a flight of stairs. Gleason himself was known as a “kamikaze” hitter, participating in some of football’s worst collisions. He was diagnosed with a concussion at least twice, and admits to having had his “bell rung” on countless occasions throughout his career.

Whatever remains unclear about the link between traumatic brain injury at ALS, the continually evolving research plainly illustrates the massive personal and societal costs of TBI. We can only hope that new ways to fight this particular consequence will be developed soon, so that all sufferers – athletes, soldiers, and others – can have a fighting chance.

If you have any questions about a brain injury matter, please give us a call us at 312-527-4500 or email us at info@passenlaw.com for a complimentary consultation. You can also learn more by following us on Twitter, reviewing our LinkedIn or Avvo.com pages, and by reviewing our website.

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Traumatic Brain Injury: A Primer

Tuesday, March 8th, 2011

In recognition of National Brain Injury Awareness Month, throughout March our Chicago brain injury lawyers are taking a closer look at the various types and causes of brain injuries.  Today, we look at traumatic brain injury (otherwise known as TBI), a name for a wide spectrum of potentially life-altering brain injuries.

Traumatic brain injuries are, just as they sound, a brain injury caused by trauma:  a sudden accident resulting in a blow or injury to the head.  TBI can result from anything from a trucking accident to a fall, a diving or sports accident to an act of violence.  Depending on the severity of the blow to the head, a traumatic brain injury can result in anything from mild, temporary symptoms to permanent disability and death.

TBI can be either an “open” or “closed” head injury, depending on the type and severity of the accident.  A closed head injury refers to a blow to the head which does not penetrate the skull, and generally results in damage to the brain (often the frontal and temporal lobes) as brain tissue, and the blood vessels within that tissue, are bruised and torn.  Closed head injury TBIs also cause damage to the parts of nerve cells which link cells together, and to other parts of the brain and body.  An open head injury occurs when the skull is penetrated – for example, a gunshot wound.  In this type of TBI, the injury is generally only to the part of the brain which is penetrated – but depending upon the level and location of penetration, these injuries can also result in severe, permanent disability and death.

The symptoms of TBI are not always immediately evident.  A victim of traumatic brain injury may not begin to show the effects of that injury until well after the blow to the head occurred – sometimes months or even years later.  And whenever these symptoms manifest, they are often not obvious to a casual observer, unlike physical serious disabilities (for instance, a wheelchair is immediately obvious, while an diminished ability to reason is not).  Those with extensive knowledge of and experience with traumatic brain injury, such as the Chicago brain injury attorneys, thus often refer to TBI as an “invisible injury.”

The invisibility of brain injury is further compounded by its ability to elude diagnostic imaging.  Some types of damage from TBI are visible through such testing (CAT scans and MRIs), such as bruising, bleeding, and tearing.  But damage to the parts of nerve cells which provide linkage is often invisible to scans and imaging.  This type of injury can thus only be detected and evaluated based upon the symptoms and disability which it causes.

Depending on the location and extent of the TBI, differing symptoms can be present.  Because the brain affects every portion of an individuals functioning, so too can an injury to the brain manifest in every area:  symptoms of TBI can be physical, cognitive and behavioral. Cognitive and behavioral symptoms can include problems with thinking, reasoning, or judgment, with language, memory, concentration, learning, emotions, impulse control, sleep issues, aggression, lack of inhibition or increased impulsiveness, depression, anxiety, and/or sensation problems (vision, hearing, taste, touch, or smell).  These factors are often present, to some extent, even with mild forms of TBI.  The physical manifestations of TBI likewise vary, but can include headaches, difficulty or disability with motor functions, dizziness or loss of balance, nausea, seizures, and pain (often neck pain).

Traumatic brain injury can also increase the risk of chronic and degenerative diseases.  Victims of TBI are more likely to develop such varying conditions as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and epilepsy.  And new evidence has emerged showing that many diagnosed cases of Lou Gehrig’s disease may, in fact, be the ongoing consequence of TBI, rather than an independent disorder.

Our Chicago brain injury attorneys have experience with the many and varied symptoms and consequences of traumatic brain injury.  We understand that these very serious injuries are often life-altering, and require significant time, energy, and resources to overcome.  That is why it is crucial that a victim of TBI whose injuries may have resulted from the negligence of another individual or company contact an experienced professional who can help evaluate his case.  A top-rated brain injury attorney can help you determine whether the parties responsible for your injuries can also be held financially responsible, and made to compensate you for your injuries and their effect on your life.

For a Free Consultation with a top brain injury lawyer at Passen Law Group, call us today at (312) 527-4500.

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March is National Brain Injury Awareness Month

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

This month is National Brain Injury Awareness Month:  a month where the Chicago brain injury attorneys of Passen Law Group, together with others nationwide, focus on raising awareness of these surprisingly common injuries, and work to prevent and treat the often devastating consequences. In honor of National Brain Injury Awareness Month, this month we will publish a series of articles on some of the types and causes of brain injury, the effects and treatment, and the common legal claims that arise from such injuries.

Today, we take a look at brain injury more generally, before diving in to some of these issues in depth.  There are two major categories of brain injury: traumatic brain injury, often referred to as TBI, and non-traumatic brain injury.

TBI is thus sometimes called acquired brain injury, or simply referred to in common parlance as a head injury.  Traumatic brain injury is, as its name implies, is a brain injury that results from trauma, generally an accident or an act of violence.  Common situations that lead to traumatic brain injuries include automobile accidents, truck accidents, workplace injuries such as construction accidents, sports injuries, boating and diving injuries, and simple falls.  The single most common cause of TBI, however, accounting for more than half such injuries, is motor vehicle accidents.

TBI can range from very mild to extremely severe, depending on factors including the seriousness of the injury or blow to the head.  Mild forms of traumatic brain injury include concussions, often caused by sports or falls.  Mild TBI can result in nothing more than a temporary disorientation or dizziness (such as “seeing stars”), or a short loss of consciousness (“blacking out”).  Even mild forms of TBI, however, should be taken seriously – an individual who experiences these symptoms after a blow to the head should, at the very least, refrain from vigorous activity for a day or two.  As our experienced brain injury lawyers are well aware, the failure to take mild TBI seriously can result in further, more severe, brain injury.

Severe forms of TBI can result in symptoms up to and including permanent disability or death.  Victims of severe traumatic brain injury often experience, in the short term, a prolonged loss of consciousness.  In the long term, these injuries can lead to memory loss, personality changes, and permanent brain damage.  After suffering a traumatic brain injury, victims can have lingering problems with everything from mental processes (cognititive abilities, processing information and problem solving, recall, and judgment) to physical function and motor skills.  These injuries thus often lead to substantial medical bills, and years of treatments and therapy – which may or may not result in full recovery, depending on the individual and the severity of the injury.

TBI can often lead to legal claims.  The victims of TBI may have a case against those who caused, or failed to prevent, the circumstances that lead to the blow to their head.  If you or a loved one is the victim of TBI, an experienced brain injury lawyer can help you evaluate your unique situation, and decide whether to take legal action, and against whom.  If your injury was caused by negligence or recklessness, legal action can help you to recover the substantial expenses associated with treating severe TBI.

Non-traumatic brain injury, by contrast, covers brain injuries that do not result from a blow to the head.  The most common cause of non-traumatic brain injury is oxygen deprivation, which can result from (among other things) cardiac arrest or stroke, near-drowning.  Non-traumatic brain injury can also be caused by illness, aneurysm, poisoning, or drug use.

Like TBI, non-traumatic brain injury may or may not lead to legal liability.  Non-traumatic brain injuries resulting from simple bad luck are not actionable in court.  If negligence or recklessness leads to a non-traumatic brain injury – such as a doctor’s negligent failure to diagnose a condition that then causes such an injury, then the victim and her family may have a legal claim. If you or a loved one have suffered a non-traumatic brain injury, an experienced Chicago brain injury attorney can help you determine whether to take legal action.

For a free consultation with a Chicago brain injury lawyer at Passen Law Group, call us at (312) 527-4500.

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