Posts Tagged ‘traumatic brain injury’

TBI and Our Children

Monday, November 22nd, 2010

TBI, or traumatic brain injury, can have devastating, life-altering or ending consequences for victims of all ages.  But our top Chicago brain injury attorneys understand that such an injury to a child is often particularly debilitating.

Unfortunately, traumatic brain injuries involving children are more common than most people realize or want to believe.  In fact, of the roughly 1.7 million Americans who suffer a serious traumatic brain injury each year, children make up by far the largest group.  This rate is highest in very young children, including infants:  those under four years of age have the highest rate of TBI-related emergency room visits.  But children up to age 14 together account for about one-third of all such visits.  Not only that, but traumatic brain injury is the single leading cause of acquired disability in children.

The most common causes of traumatic brain injury, in children and adults, are falls (both sports-related and otherwise) and car accidents.  Children who suffer a TBI can have years or even a lifetime of health and development problems, including difficulties with thinking, short and long term memory, perception, language, and emotional control.

And there has also been a spike in reported TBIs in recent years.  In the period from 2002 to 2006 (the most recent data available), emergency room visits due to serious traumatic brain injury rose to 1.7 million annually from 1.4 million annually.  This .3 million-injury increase is a 62% overall rise.

But this is not all bad news.  Many experts – including the top brain injury lawyers of Passen Law Group – believe that this shocking increase is actually due to increased knowledge and awareness of TBI, not to an increasing amount of injuries.  We hope and believe that the increase in emergency room visits means that the victims of TBI, particularly the youngest victims, are now receiving proper evaluation and care.

Increasing awareness can also lead to fewer injuries in the first place.  The simple expedient of ensuring that children wear a protective helmet while participating in such activities as biking and skating prevents innumerable serious and mild TBIs.  Early evaluation and response can also minimize the effects of TBI, particularly mild TBIs such as concussions.  Recent efforts, such as baseline cognitive testing of healthy student athletes (so that the severity of an injury can be determined by comparison) and proper training of coaches and support staff to identify and respond to concussions and other forms of TBI, can keep injured children safe by preventing much more dangerous successive blows to the head.

We hope that as awareness continues to grow, TBIs and TBI-related emergency room visits will now begin to decline.  In the meantime, if you or someone you love has suffered such an injury, and you believe that the negligence of another may be to blame, we encourage you to seek both medical and legal help.  Experienced brain injury attorneys such at those at Passen Law Group can help you determine whether legal action is warranted, and make sure that your brain injury case receives the specialized attention and expertise that it deserves.

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

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Traumatic Brain Injury Can Mimic Lou Gehrig’s Disease

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Lou Gehrig, the former New York Yankee, is a symbol of inspiration and courage for many Americans, especially those with loved ones fighting progressive or degenerative diseases such as the condition which now bears his name.  Yet, as our Chicago brain injury lawyers explain,  a new study in the Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neuropathology reveals that athletes (and others) who have been diagnosed with or even died from Lou Gehrig’s Disease may have been misdiagnosed.  The paper, which was peer-reviewed before publication, reaches the shocking conclusion that traumatic brain injury (TBI), including concussions and other sports injuries, can mimic Lou Gehrig’s disease.

Lou Gehrig’s disease, technically known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or A.L.S., is a disease affecting the brain and spinal cord, which control voluntary muscle movement.  This leads to problems with strength and coordination, and eventually progresses into the inability to perform basic tasks (sitting, standing), and eventually death.

The study was prompted by reports from the doctors at the Boston University School of Medicine, who serve as the principal researchers looking into brain damage in former NFL players who have passed away, and at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center of Bedford, Massachusetts.  These doctors reported that they had found interesting results in two NFL players and one boxer.  All three men had been diagnosed with Lou Gehrig’s disease, but had markings in their spines showing that they, in fact, did not have the disease.  Instead, they were suffering from a different fatal disease – one caused by traumatic brain injury, and which erodes the nervous system in ways that mimic Lou Gehrig’s disease.

These findings help to explain why athletes and veterans are diagnosed with Lou Gehrig’s disease at rates significantly higher than the general population.  Indeed, NFL players are diagnosed with Lou Gehrig’s disease at a rate eight times that of the general population.  Likewise, in 2005, a study found that in Italy, professional soccer players are diagnosed with the disease at a rate six times that of the general population.  U.S. Soldiers also have an elevated rate of  Lou Gehrig’s diagnoses.

If you have suffered a traumatic brain injury (mild to severe), and were then diagnosed with A.L.S., it may be worth reexamining your condition.  If you were misdiagnosed, your treatment can be altered to help you cope with the condition you actually have.  Moreover, depending on the circumstances surrounding your brain injury, you may have a cause of action that can help you defray the costs of managing your condition.  Our Chicago brain injury lawyers can help you analyze your specific situation and help you determine what action you want to take.

This study, with its profound implications, should have an immediate effect on diagnoses in athletes and veterans.  Once the true nature of their disease is understood, they can be more appropriately treated – and, with further research and commitment, perhaps even saved.  These findings should also help advance the search for effective treatments for Lou Gehrig’s disease itself, as it will eliminate from studies and data those who do not actually have the disease.

Lou Gehrig himself sustained multiple traumatic brain injuries.  For example, in a 1934 game against the Norfolk Tars, the Yankee great was hit in the head by a fastball, above his eye.  He was left unconscious, and had to be helped off the field after he came to.  In fact, Gehrig had a history of repeated concussions and other traumatic brain injuries.  This is only in his baseball career – historians suspect that he also suffered traumatic brain injury during his years as a halfback in high school and college football.  Because Gehrig’s remains were cremated, we will never know whether he in fact died from the disease that bears his name.

In addition to Lou Gehrig himself, other famous victims of the disease include theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking.  Hawking’s disease has often been described as “atypical,” however, because he has lived far longer than expected.  Notably, it has been reported that the first “sign” of Hawking’s Lou Gehrig’s disease was when he lost his balance, fell down a flight of stairs, and hit his head.  His case could thus be reexamined, as well.

Gehrig, who is famous for his streak of 2,130 games over 14 years, was also notorious for his “commitment” to playing through concussions, traumatic brain injuries, and other injuries.  We now know that his legendary “toughness” is better described as foolhardiness, or even stupidity.  This new study confirms what our Chicago brain injury attorneys have been saying all along – playing sports with a brain injury is an unacceptable risk.  Professional athletes should never take this risk, for their own sake and for the sake of the example they set for our young people.  And young people who are encouraged or ordered to “play through” even mild brain injury, and who suffer long-term consequences up to and including Lou Gehrig’s disease may have a cause of action.

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

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Brain Injuries’ Massive Societal Costs

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

brain injury consequences 300x216 Brain Injuries Massive Societal CostsFor the past month, our brain injury attorneys have been conducting an ongoing series on the various types and causes of brain injury.  As national Brain Injury Awareness Month comes to a close, today we take a step back to look at the dramatic societal costs of these various neurological conditions.

Brain injuries are more widespread than many whose lives have not been touched would realize.  In America, every year about two million head injuries occur – or just short of 200 per every 100,000 Americans.  Of these, about 1.5 million people suffer a brain injury which causes them to “black out,” or lose consciousness, but which does not commit them to a hospital or other institution long-term.  An additional 300,000 Americans each year sustain a brain injury that results in hospitalization, and of these, about 99,000 suffer a lasting disability.

According to a study in the Journal of Neuropsychiatry, this means that in America alone, for each 100,000 adults (age 15 and over), there are about 62 people who suffer from enduring or permanent disability caused by traumatic brain injury (TBI).  Traumatic brain injuries also result in about 56,000 deaths each year in America – about 34% of total deaths from injury.  If you are one of the many Americans whose life has been touched by TBI, you will need a  trained professional professional to help you decide whether to seek compensation.  Our top Chicago TBI lawyers can help.

Brain damage stems from any number of causes.  The largest categories of traumatic brain injuries are automobile accidents (around 28%) and sports (around 20%).  Skiing accidents are particularly prone to result in head injuries – the New York Times has reported that an alarming 5-10 percent of such accidents lead to this type of injury.  Assaults comprise another large chunk of traumatic brain injuries (around 9%).  These figures, however, take into account all traumatic brain injuries.  When only those TBIs that result in hospitalization are considered, almost half such injuries are the result of motor vehicle accidents.  To speak with one of our experienced attorneys regarding a car accident traumatic brain injury, call us at (312) 527-4500 for a free consultation.

The landscape of traumatic brain injury is also constantly evolving.  Between 1984 and 1992, for instance, brain injuries from car, bus and truck accidents declined an impressive 25%.  Unfortunately, during that same period TBI from firearms increased by 13%.

The personal and societal costs of dealing with brain injuries cannot be overstated.  In the mid-1990s, the National Foundation for Brain Research stated that the costs of dealing with only traumatic brain injury amount to $48.3 billion in America each year.  Sadly, the costs of medical treatment are the worst for those who do not survive – costs that are passed along to the family they leave behind.  Again in the 1990s, those who suffered fatal brain damage had average medical expenses of $454,717.  These expenses have only increased over time.  If someone you love has suffered a fatal brain injury as the result of negligence, an experienced Chicago wrongful death attorney can help you to navigate the legal landscape and receive justice for your loved one.

Other estimates from the 1990s show the purely economic costs for brain injury victims who do recover.  According to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, the costs for a survivor of a severe traumatic brain injury can reach over four million dollars over the course of her life.  The average traumatic brain injury, regardless of severity, has medical-related costs of around $150,000, including medical bills, modifications to a home, rehabilitation for life and work, and increased health insurance costs.  It is important to note that this average includes even those who suffer comparatively mild injuries such as concussions, and thus even this alarming figure is deceptively low.  For those who suffer a brain injury severe enough to require rehabilitation, the average cost over only four years reaches around $200,000. For those who require extensive rehabilitation, the cost of this treatment can be around $1,000 each day.   Victims of a severe TBI can take years to fully recover, with gradual improvement often progressing over the course of ten years or more.

It is also important to note that in the ten years since these estimates were made, costs have gone up substantially — and these costs do not include the severe past, present and future physical and emotional damage to brain injury victims and their families — including pain and suffering, disability / loss of normal life (inability to enjoy the pleasurable aspects of life), wage loss, loss of society (companionship) and disfigurement.  Only a top personal injury lawyer, such as those at Passen Law Group, can take the time to understand the loss experienced by brain injury victims and their families, and communicate that loss to the other side, and eventually to a jury of one’s peers.

Victims of traumatic brain injury who need support services in order to return to work find that those services cost tens of thousands of dollars in the first year alone.  Many brain injury survivors, however, do not have the ability to return to work, even with rehabilitation and assistance.  Although estimates cover a broad range, some studies show as many as 80% of survivors, particularly those who suffered a severe traumatic brain injury, unable to ever resume work.  Many survivors also require assistance with daily activities, and can suffer from depression, anxiety, and isolation.  These are all costs that must be taken into account when pursuing a case against a person or company whose negligence caused a brain injury.  If you have suffered a brain injury, an experienced Chicago brain injury attorney can help you obtain the full compensation to which you are entitled.

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

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