Information on Positron Emission Tomography PET

While I have seen the uses and acceptance of PET in traumatic brain injury cases in the court room, this is something worth sharing on other uses of PET:

PET scans are commonly used to investigate the following conditions:
Epilepsy - it can reveal which part of the patient's brain is being affected by epilepsy. This helps doctors decide on the most suitable treatments.MRI and/or CT scans are recommended for people after a first seizure, this study explains.

Alzheimer's disease - it is very useful in helping the doctor diagnose Alzheimer's disease. A PET scan that measures uptake of sugar in the brain significantly improves the accuracy of diagnosing a type of dementia often mistaken for Alzheimer's disease, a study revealed.

Interesting related articles:

What is MRI? How does MRI work?

What is a CT scan? What is a CAT scan?
Cancer - PET scans can show up a cancer, reveal the stage of the cancer, show whether the cancer has spread, help doctors decide on the most appropriate cancer treatment, and give doctors an indication on the effectiveness of ongoing chemotherapy. A PET scan several weeks after starting radiation treatment for lung cancer can indicate whether the tumor will respond to the treatment, a study showed. This article looks at whether PET scans are beneficial during cancer diagnosis, staging and monitoring.

Heart disease - a PET scan helps detect which specific parts of the heart have been damaged or scarred. Any faults in the working of the heart are more likely to be revealed with the help of a PET scan. A study revealed how comprehensive diagnosis of heart disease based on a single CT scan is possible.

Medical research - researchers, especially those involved in how the brain functions get a great deal of vital data from PET scans.

ATV Accident Results in Death and Brain Injury

A 7-year-old Draper boy has died in an all-terrain vehicle crash at a family farm in southern Utah.

Landon Woodbury's father, Spencer Woodbury, says the boy and his 12-year-old sister were riding on ATVs at the farm near Monticello on Wednesday when the boy approached a dump truck that was carrying gravel.

The San Juan County sheriff's office says Landon Woodbury slammed into it and was thrown headfirst into the vehicle.

Landon Woodbury, who was wearing a helmet, sustained serious brain injuries and died on Thursday after being transferred to Primary Children's Medical Center in Salt Lake City.

San Juan County Sheriff Mike Lacy says rain and speed may have contributed to the accident, which is under investigation.
 

Read the full story by clicking here http://www.sltrib.com/

TBI Facts Primer

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a serious public health problem in the United States. Each year, traumatic brain injuries contribute to a substantial number of deaths and cases of permanent disability. Recent data shows that, on average, approximately 1.4 million people sustain a traumatic brain injury annually.

A TBI is caused by a bump, blow or jolt to the head or a penetrating head injury that disrupts the normal function of the brain. Not all blows or jolts to the head result in a TBI. The severity of a TBI may range from “mild,” i.e., a brief change in mental status or consciousness to “severe,” i.e., an extended period of unconsciousness or amnesia after the injury. The majority of TBIs that occur each year are concussions or other forms of mild TBI.

CDC’s research and programs work to prevent TBI and help people better recognize, respond, and recover if a TBI occurs.
 

 

Go to the CDC (Centers for Disease Control) to access the following facts sheets.  Click here.

 

Concussion in Sports
An estimated 1.6 to 3.8 million sports- and recreation-related concussions occur in the United States each year. This fact sheet provides an overview of concussion in sports and recreation and steps to take to help prevent these injuries.


Facts about Traumatic Brain Injury
This fact sheet was developed by CDC in collaboration with ten national organizations. It contains up-to-date information about the incidence, causes, risk factors, and cost associated with TBI in the United States.


Facts about Traumatic Brain Injury (Spanish) Datos sobre lesiones traumáticas del cerebro
Esta hoja informativa contiene la información más reciente sobre incidencia, causas, factores de riesgo y costos relacionados con lesiones traumáticas del cerebro.


Traumatic Brain Injury: A Guide for Criminal Justice Professionals
This guide provides an overview of TBI, information on the extent of TBI and related problems within the criminal justice system, and how these problem can be addressed.




Traumatic Brain Injury in Prisons and Jails: An Unrecognized Problem
This guide provides information for TBI professionals about what is known about individuals with TBI in prisons and jails, how TBI-related problems affect them and others while they are incarcerated, and what is needed to address these problems.


Victimization of Persons with Traumatic Brain Injury or Other Disabilities: A Fact Sheet for Professionals
This fact sheet was developed for professionals and provides an overview of the topic of victimization of persons with TBI or other disabilities.



Victimization of Persons with Traumatic Brain Injury or Other Disabilities: A Fact Sheet for Friends and Families
This fact sheet provides a general overview of victimization and risks to people with TBI or other disabilities.



 

 


* Links to non-Federal organizations found at this site are provided solely as a service to our users. These links do not constitute an endorsement of these organizations or their programs by CDC or the Federal Government, and none should be inferred. CDC is not responsible for the content of the individual organization Web pages found at these links.

 

Another Case of Shaken Baby

A Massachusettes man is charged with shaking his girlfriend's 10-month old baby to death.

Authorities say the boy died at Hasbro Children's Hospital in Providence after being diagnosed with diffuse brain edema and bilateral retinal hemorrhaging, both symptoms of shaken baby syndrome.

Police said Lopez was the only adult present at the apartment when the baby suffered extensive injuries. The baby's mother was working.
 

Heartbreaking.

Reported at http://www.southcoasttoday.com/

Lateralized Brains

I had the opportunity to hold a brain during my trip to the morgue a few years ago. It was an amazing experience. The brain is soft and infirm. It looks relatively symmetrical with each half held together at the corpus callosum.  

But each half is not perfectly symmetrical and that goes against the pop psychological “left-right brain” theories. Actually each half is not a mirror image of the other which enables us to perform different tasks at the same time.

“In the 1990s psychologist Michael Corballis of the University of Auckland in New Zealand argued that the asymmetry of the brain – known as lateralization - was a key step in the evolution of our species, giving us language and additional mental powers that other animals lack.

“Today Corballis readily admits he was wrong. Lateralized brains are not unique to humans. Parrots prefer picking up things with their left foot. Toads tend to attack other toads from the right but go after prey from the left. Zebra fish are likely to look at new things with their right eye and familiar things with their left….”

The May 2009 edition of Discover Magazine published an article by Carl Zimmer who frequently publishes on brain issues. He says, “One hypothesis is that a lateralized brain is more powerful than one that works like a mirror image. Instead of two matching parts of the brain performing an identical task, one can take charge, leaving the other free to do something else.”

It seems that our ability to multitask is owed largely to our not so symmetrical brain halves. Zimmer’s article is fascinating and can be read by clicking here.

Soldiers Not Willing to Reveal Injury

When Army Col. (Dr.) Kenneth Lee began evaluating more than 3,000 Wisconsin Army National Guardsmen called to duty last fall in the state's largest operational deployment since World War II to ensure their medical readiness, he approached the task with unique and personal insights.  Soldiers are not willing to reveal their injuries.

Between their initial alert last year and early this year, when they moved to their mobilization station at Fort Bliss, Texas, Lee had to put these Soldiers into one of two categories: "green" if they were deployable or "red" for they weren't.

It was a tough call, he admits, because many of the Soldiers didn't want to confess to issues that might keep them from deploying with their units. Some hid musculoskeletal or other injuries for fear they'd be forced out of the military if deemed nondeployable. Others acknowledged they had medical issues, but hadn't addressed them because they had no health insurance or couldn't spare time away from their civilian jobs to get treated.

But the bigger challenge, Lee said, was identifying troops with mental-health issues, including post-traumatic stress and traumatic brain injuries. Lee calls these "the invisible wounds" of war - issues that don't mean a Soldier can't deploy, but that have to be weighed when making that determination.
 

This problem has come up more and more as physicans and VET medical staff have dealt with returning vets.

I am currently handling a case for a man who underwent moderate to severe brain damage, surgery and near fatal seizures.  Yet when given the chance to return to Iraq for a tour of duty, he opts to go since his working ability as a civilian has plummeted. It is my hope that the military will identify the problems this man has and not let him go into harms way.  He is currently receiving training for preparedness to return to Iraq.

I have sent the medical records documenting the seizures and injury but find it difficult to get the attention of the military decision makers.  Therefore I advocate procedures like those taken by Army Col. (Dr.) Kenneth Lee.

Immediate treatment comment

Dr. Baxter writes in response to my post on getting immediate care in brain injury:

Just last month I witnessed an 83 year old woman stumble and fall on her face. She wanted to go, but I kept her there, administered first aid and called paramedics. By the time she was strapped down to the back board in readiness to transport her (against her will) to the hospital, she began acting very combative. Combativeness in a victim of head trauma is a very strong sign that brain injury was sustained. You just can't tell immediately after the trauma. It is always best to take the proper precautions.

Recently, progesterone therapy has been found to have very potent anti-inflammatory effects on the brains of people that have suffered traumatic brain injury, thereby lessening the severity of the injury. This is just further evidence that there are many reasons why we all need to do all we can to promote hormone balance in ourselves and others.

Thank you for the comment.

Oregon Brain Injury Association Needs Your Help

My friend and collegue, Sherry Stock, sent me this message.  Sherry is the mover and shaker at the Brain Injury Association of Oregon.  I have helped her and the Association in the past and encourage anyone willing to do the same.

We need your help right now-this morning—Get this out to your email list and friends-we need help right now
Call:
Senator Courtney (503-986-1600)
Senator Richard Devlin (503-986-1719)
Senator Margaret Carter (503-986-1722)

The Facts

RE: HB 2413

HB2413 only affects those who are breaking the law-not the general public.

HB2413 has passed both the House Human Services Committee and by House Revenue, which gave it a do-pass vote. The bill has never had any opposition from any group or lobbyist for any group.

BIAOR contacted public safety groups and asked if they had a position on HB 2413. The following groups stated that they either did not oppose or remained neutral on the $2 additional assessment on moving traffic violations or sent a letter of support.

Multnomah County Sherriff’s Office (sent letter of support)
Portland Police Association, Scott Westerman, President
Oregon Council of Police Associations
Oregon State Sheriff’s Association
Oregon District Attorneys Association

Important Facts:

Ÿ Each year, approximately 20,000 people in Oregon sustain a Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI). (This and all other statistics – unless noted otherwise – are estimates using statistics for TBI from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.)

Ÿ More than 670 people in Oregon die every year as a result of TBI. The main causes of TBI deaths in Oregon are motor vehicle crashes.

Ÿ 32% of all TBIs that required hospitalization in 2006 were the result of motor vehicle accidents. (“Injury In Oregon, 2008” OR Department of Human Services)

Ÿ Nearly 20% of Oregon’s survivors with TBI will have a moderate to severe injury requiring assistance for the rest of their lives - 49% of these are from motor vehicle accidents.

Ÿ Blasts are the leading cause of TBI for active duty military personnel in war zones, including the Oregon National Guard– 320,000 nationally and an estimated 3500 Oregon National Guard.

 

Sherry Stock, MS CBIS
Executive Director
Brain Injury Association of Oregon
2145 NW Overton St, Portland OR 97210

Mailing Address:
PO Box 549
Molalla OR 97038

503.740.3155 800-544-5243 fax: 503.961-8730

biaor@biaoregon.org
sherry@biaoregon.org
http://www.biaoregon.org

IRS 501(c)(3) organization
Affiliated with the Brain Injury Association of America
Tax ID: 93-0900797


Only a life lived for others is a life worthwhile.
--Albert Einstein

 

Immediate Treatment Key In TBI

I found an article by Dennis Thompson, HealthDay Reporter, entitled "For Every Blow to the Head, Quick Action Is Urged; Symptoms may not be noticeable, but fatal brain damage can occur." Consumer Health News (English). HealthDay. 2009.   In it Mr. Thompson interviews Dr. O'Shanick, a neuropsychiatrist in Virginia who also heads the Brain Injury Association of America.  I have worked with Dr. O'Shanick on cases and present this article here to assist in making the point that delays in treatment in cases of traumatic brain injury can have devastating impact.

Gregory O'Shanick has been the Medical Director of the Center for Neurorehabilitation Services in Midlothian, Virginia since 1991. After attending Ohio State University, he entered the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston and graduated in 1977. His post-graduate studies were at Duke University Medical Center. His academic career includes faculty appointments at University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Medical College of Virginia and most recently, in the Department of Neurological Surgery at the University of Virginia. He has authored more than 100 publications, including editing or co-editing three textbooks. As a result of his international reputation in neuropsychiatry and neurorehabilitation, he was asked to be the first National Medical Director of BIAA in 1996, a post he still holds.

Dr. O'Shanick is a member of the American Neuropsychiatric Association, the American Academy of Neurology, the American Society of Neurorehabilitation and a Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association. He has previously chaired a panel developing evidence-based guidelines for the evaluation of mild traumatic brain injury.
The tragic death of actress Natasha Richardson in March riveted people's attention to the issue of brain injury and raised important questions about what to do if this happens to you or a loved one.

Richardson died hours after taking a minor fall while skiing at a Quebec resort. She picked herself up from the fall and refused medical attention, but three hours later in her hotel room, she complained of a headache. Within hours she was in critical condition. Two days after the fall, she died.

"Even when someone looks fine initially, it can still have devastating consequences," said Dr. Greg O'Shanick, national medical director for the Brain Injury Association of America. "The critical issue is that you don't have to lose consciousness to sustain a significant brain injury," he explained.

"In this case, Richardson had what's called an epidural hematoma," O'Shanick continued. "There's an artery that runs right underneath the skull, and the skull on the temple is very thin. You can break the bone, the bone cuts the artery and a high-pressure blood clot forms. That then squeezes the brain."

Richardson's death, though, is known to have saved at least one life. An Ohio couple whose 7-year-old daughter had been struck in the temple two days earlier by a baseball hit by her dad rushed the girl to a doctor after watching a news report on Richardson, according to published reports.

It turned out she was suffering from the same condition as Richardson. Her parents' quick action was credited with saving the little girl's life.

More than 1.4 million people suffer a traumatic brain injury each year in the United States, according to the Brain Injury Association of America. Most are treated and released from an emergency department, but 235,000 are hospitalized and 50,000 die.

Dr. Rade Vukmir, an emergency department physician, clinical professor of emergency medicine at the University of Pittsburgh and a spokesman for the American College of Emergency Physicians, credits media coverage of Richardson's accident and death with making people more aware of potential brain injuries.

However, Vukmir said, it's still too early to tell if that awareness has translated into more people coming to emergency departments worried about head injuries.

O'Shanick said his organization received many phone calls and Web site hits in the days after Richardson's injury. "They wanted to find out a lot about the basics of head injury, prevention issues, how much of a hit does it take to create that kind of injury," he said.

People seem to have a good understanding of the basics of head injuries, Vukmir said: "Most people who pass out know to come in. Most people who vomit know to come in."

But the real problem, illustrated by the cases of both Richardson and the Ohio girl, is that potentially fatal brain injuries don't always produce severe or noticeable symptoms.

Nonetheless, certain steps should be taken to ensure that someone who's taken a blow to the head will be all right. They include:

Stay with the person. "If there's a question of what's going on, don't let the person be by themselves," O'Shanick said. "Make sure there's a person in attendance, watching over them. If you see someone once and they go off to their hotel room, unless there's someone there watching, no one's going to know about any changes in behavior. You really do need to make sure there's someone watching."

Watch for behavior changes. If the person becomes suddenly drowsy, irritable or confused, acts in a drunken manner, begins repeating statements or has trouble walking or speaking, get the person to an emergency room immediately for treatment, O'Shanick said.

Be particularly cautious with high-risk groups. The very young, the very old, people on blood thinners and anyone who's intoxicated are at increased risk for brain injury and should be given special attention if an injury is suspected, Vukmir said.

Of course, there's no reason at all to maintain a wait-and-see attitude, he added.

"We encourage patients to present themselves if they have any questions about their head injury," Vukmir said. "Call a health care professional or present yourself for emergency care so we can ask the questions and sift through the information."
 

TBI and Death are REAL!

While I do not expect this event to be picked up in the local paper, I am reporting that Traumatic Brain Injury and Death are real and all around us.

Last night as I, my wife, and children were watching television before bed we saw siren lights in front of our home.  Several neighbors had gathered around a firetruck and police cars.

We live in a gated community adjacent to a park.  Apparently some young boys aged 12 to 17, two of whom were brothers, were hopping the wall from the park into the neighborhood.  One fell to the concrete walkway on his head.  Another ran to the guard gate to get help explaining that his friend fell.  The boy gave the guard his home address which caused first responders to go to the wrong location.  When they finally figured out the correct location and arrived to assist, the boy was not moving.  His brother was found leaning over his motionless brother.  He was dead.

Who knows if the death could have been avoided had first responders not been sidetracked to the wrong location?  Whether the delay contributed to the death? It may have.  But the stark reality of how quickly and easily life can be taken was made startling real for my young daughters, wife and me.

 

Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo

Brain Werner of the Balance Institue shared a "Great review of BPPV" from an article in Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery (2008) 139, S47-S81.  He states " This is very common post mTBI and commonly missed."


A primary complaint of dizziness accounts for 5.6 million clinic visits in the United States per year, and between 17 and 42 percent of patients with vertigo ultimately receive a diagnosis of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV).1-3 BPPV is a form of positional vertigo.
 

● Positional vertigo is defined as a spinning sensation produced
by changes in head position relative to gravity.
● Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo is defined as a
disorder of the inner ear characterized by repeated episodes
of positional vertigo.
 

Traditionally, the terms benign and paroxysmal have been used to characterize this particular form of positional vertigo. In this context, the descriptor benign historically implies that BPPV was a form of positional vertigo not due to any serious CNS disorder and that the overall prognosis for recovery was favorable.4 However, undiagnosed and untreated BPPV may not have “benign” functional, health, and quality-of-life impacts. The term paroxysmal in this context describes the rapid and sudden onset of the vertigo associated with an episode of BPPV. BPPV has also been termed benign positional vertigo, paroxysmal positional vertigo, positional vertigo, benign paroxysmal nystagmus, and paroxysmal positional nystagmus. In this guideline, the panel chose to retain the terminology of BPPV because it is the most common terminology encountered in the literature
and in clinical practice.
 

The Balance Institute sees patients for among other things:

•Adolescent balance disorders
•Amputee rehabilitation
•Aviation medicine
•Cerebral vascular
•Chemical toxicity
•Chronic mobility disorders
•Dizziness/Dysequilibrium
•Fall risk identification, prevention and management
•Head injuries/Concussion
•Movement disorders
•Neurogenerative diseases
•Pharmacological/Ototoxicity
•Spinal Cord Injury
•Sports medicine (performance enhancement)
Vestibular disorders (e.g., BBPV)
•Worker's compensation/Legal 

Response to President Obama's Medical Malpractice Speech

The American Association of Justice published the following in response to President Obama's Seech to the American Medical Association on June 15, 2009:

“It’s clear America’s health care system is in crisis. Over 40 million people are without health insurance and costs are skyrocketing. President Obama is right that health care reform is needed now and patient safety should be the top priority.

“Empirically-based practice guidelines, developed by independent experts, is an idea we can support, as long as it does not lower quality or standards of care. Instead, these guidelines should lead to greater patient safety.

“According to the Institute of Medicine, 98,000 people die every year because of medical errors. Eliminating these errors, not further hurting the victims of negligence, is where lawmakers should focus their attention. By taking away the rights of people to hold wrongdoers accountable, the quality of health care will suffer tremendously.

“However, the notion that ‘defensive medicine’ is leading to higher health care costs is not supported by empirical data or academic literature. Recent news reports, CBO and GAO analyses, and statements from administration officials have shown that physicians will over-test and over-treat purely for financial reasons, unrelated to liability concerns.

“Limiting the legal rights of injured patients will do nothing to lower health care costs or aid the uninsured. We will work over the coming weeks and months to educate members of Congress and the administration on how to best protect victims of medical negligence.”
 

Anti Consumer Movie Ads

The New York Times advises that movie theaters are about to show anti consumer ads as part of a campaign by  www.facesoflawsuitabuse.org.

INSTEAD of the latest on Hollywood stars, moviegoers may get a dose of advocacy this month when they settle into their seats for the feature presentation.

Coming to theaters are commercials that are intended to spell out the perils of frivolous lawsuits as told by “everyday Americans,” including small-business owners who have been hit with costly lawsuits they believed were arbitrary and abusive.

This is the wrong message.  When the one who feels injured is the business owner, then retribution is appropriate.  But not if it is a consumer who is injured.  This makes no sense. 

Frivolous lawsuits are not a way of life for the vast majority of lawyers.  The news media simply portrays that myth.  And if any one believes the news media does not impact the masses then I have a frivolous lawsuit to sell them.

President Obama and Medical Malpractice

Although the A.M.A.’s highest legislative priority is capping jury awards, highly unlikely under the Obama administration, it does favor legislation like that proposed by Senators Obama and Clinton. Dr. Rohack said the group’s legislative experts were also working over the weekend to draft a bill that would set out a way to protect doctors who are sued if they have followed professional practice guidelines.

The New York Times reports that while President Obama spoke to doctors yesterday assuring them that he favors limiting malpractice suits, he definitely does not favor limiting malpractice awards.  He believes that limiting recovery for clear errors is bad for the victims of those medical errors.

His position on limiting malpractice suits with such things as the "Sorry" apology might be what it takes to bring Republicans to the table.

 

88 Plan

88 Plan

Named for Pro Football Hall of Famer and NFL legend John Mackey who wore jersey number 88 for the Baltimore Colts, the 88 Plan is the first program of its kind in this country. The 88 Plan provides retired players up to $88,000 per year for medical and custodial care resulting from dementia, including Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. Funding for dementia research is also being provided. Almost $3 million has been distributed to suffering players and their families through this benefit. 

The NFL Care plan includes disability, assisted living, joint repacement, spine treatment and prescrinption drug benefit.

 Read the full article here

Comment on Helmets

Carl,

Thank you for your comment on helmet laws. For those of you who have not seen Carl’s comment I am reprinting it here.

Could someone please help a concerned father out and point me in the direction of skateboarding helmet laws in Las Vegas. I have a teenage daughter who has a new friend who enjoys skating. I encourage Molly to try new things, with in reason. She's a good kid asking Mom and I if this new venture would be alright. Mom and I did share our concerns which came off unsupportive to our teen. In truth the girl does get 99% of all she asks for and will be getting her board too. Which will soon be sitting next to her bikes, in-line skates, and scooter in 3months, I'm OK with that! I just figure if I know and understand the laws surrounding this activity I can better help mom feel better about it as well. And we all can be clear on what is safe responsible ridding. Both by law and as concerned parents!

Thanks for whatever help can be offered...
Carl Foster!

I found this web site dealing with the status of laws in the country. http://www.iihs.org/laws/HelmetUseCurrent.aspx#NV

 Nevada has no law regarding bicycles and helmets.
 

I have 3 young girls and share your concern about the potential injury from riding on “wheelies” skateboards and the like. My suggestion would be to press hard on educating your daughter on what injury to the head and brain can do and how easily it can happen from a skateboard accident.

Talk about the recent actress, Natasha Richardson’s, Skiing accident. http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2009/mar/19/need-for-ski-helmets

Here are more sites you mind helpful. http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/pubs/349.pdf http://www.neuroskills.com/tbi/cdcbikemenu.shtml

Good luck and best of health

Tim
 

Ruvo Center Soon to Open

The Ruvo Center anchors the Medical Office District of downtown Las Vegas' Symphony Park.  It will provide breaking research and treatments for brain disorders such as Alzheimer's and Lou Gehrig's Disease.  I will keep my eye on this great addition to the Las Vegas medical community.

Marshall Allan at the Las Vegas Sun is also keeping an eye on the Center.

As the vision for the Ruvo Center for Brain Health evolved in the past decade, its most fantastic ambition became the curing of Alzheimer’s and other degenerative brain disorders.

But from the get-go, the founders knew they first had to provide emotional and logistical support for the patients, families and friends who deal with the repercussions of the grueling diseases.

Today, the Ruvo Center is moving aggressively on its quest to cure and treat the diseases, in partnership with the renowned Cleveland Clinic as the more expansive Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health. It will begin seeing patients in July at a facility that, for now, is best known for its daring Frank Gehry design.

Last week, the clinic turned its focus to the emotional and logistical needs of patients and caregivers.

Two dozen experts gathered as a sort of brain trust to help the Ruvo Center address the oft-forgotten social needs of caregivers and patients living with Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s, Parkinson’s and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS).

The people who attended say the assembly was unprecedented, drawing experts from the likes of the Cleveland Clinic, Duke University, the Alzheimer’s Association. They came at the invitation of the Ruvo Center.

Read the full article here.

President Obama May Advocate Medical Malpractice Reform

The American Assocation of Justice has released this and I have contacted my senator.  Please consider doing likewise.

I’m writing to alert each of you that on this coming Monday (at a time still to be determined) President Obama will be speaking to the American Medical Association. Please see the story below.

We are extremely concerned that once again he will advocate for some kind of medical malpractice “reform” in the health care bill. In fact, it is our present understanding that it is likely he will do so. We do not expect the speech to be long on specifics. We are on top of this situation, working with our Congressional allies on this urgently. We will inform all of you as to details as soon as we can. Stay tuned!

In the meantime, we need your help. Please contact your Senators and Representative and tell them that medical malpractice tort reform should not be included in the health care bill. The notion that Americans should have to relinquish one right in order to gain another is unacceptable.

Sincerely,
Linda A. Lipsen
Senior Vice President for Public Affairs
 

Obama to address AMA Delegates in Chicago
By Bruce Japsen
Tribune reporter
12:39 PM CDT, June 10, 2009
Amid the push in Washington for health care reform, President Barack Obama will on Monday address delegates to the American Medical Association, the Chicago-based national doctor group confirmed today.

The AMA's policy-making House of Delegates meets in Chicago beginning this weekend through next Wednesday. The national doctors group represents about a quarter of a million doctors across the country and its support of any effort to cover the more than 46 million uninsured Americans is seen as critical.

It's unusual for a president, let alone a non-physician, to address an AMA House of Delegates meeting. The AMA said the last president to do so was Ronald Reagan in 1983.

It will be only the second time Obama has been to Chicago since he became president. His previous visit, a three-night stay in mid-February, included a dinner out with his wife, a basketball game at the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools, morning workouts, visits with friends and a haircut. The White House has not yet said whether the president will spend part of his weekend in the city, before the AMA appearance on Monday.

On Thursday, Obama is scheduled to appear at a town hall style event in Green Bay, where he will also push for health care reform.
 

Mayo Clinic Site

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Your brain floats within your skull, surrounded by fluid that cushions it from the bounces of everyday movement. But the fluid may not be able to absorb the force of a sudden blow or a quick stop. In these situations, your brain may slide forcefully against the inner wall of your skull and become bruised.

 

 

An intracranial hematoma occurs when a blood vessel ruptures within your brain or between your skull and your brain. The collection of blood (hematoma) compresses your brain tissue.

 

Signs and symptoms of an intracranial hematoma may occur from immediately to several weeks or longer after a blow to your head. As time progresses, pressure on your brain increases, producing some or all of the following signs and symptoms:

■Headache
■Nausea
■Vomiting
■Drowsiness
■Dizziness
■Confusion
■Slurred speech or loss of ability to speak
■Pupils of unequal size
■Weakness in limbs on one side of your body

The Mayo Clinic publishes a very useful site for information on brain injury.  I selected a few interesting excerpts and you can access the site by clicking http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/intracranial-hematoma/DS00330.

BIAA Legislative Update

The Brain Injury Association of America continues its legislative efforts:

Brain Injury Association of America
Policy Corner E-Newsletter -- June 12, 2009
A weekly update on federal policy activity related to traumatic brain injury
__________________________________________________________________

In This Issue:
Cognitive Rehabilitation Coverage
Health Care Reform Update
NIDRR Grant Forecast
Coalition for Regenerative Stem Cell Medicine update

________________________________________

The Policy Corner is made possible by the Centre for Neuro Skills, James F. Humphreys and Associates, and Lakeview Healthcare Systems, Inc. Brain Injury Association of America gratefully acknowledges their support for legislative action.

________________________________________

Cognitive Rehabilitation Coverage

This week BIAA learned of two important victories centered around cognitive rehabilitation services. Anthem Insurance Companies (Anthem BC/BS, Anthem Health Plans) revised its cognitive rehabilitation coverage policy in December 2008 and cited BIAA's position paper among the authoritative sources consulted. Last month, United Health Care followed suit by publishing a coverage change in its May 2009 Network Bulletin .

Also this week, BIAA sent a letter to President Obama urging TRICARE coverage for service members. This is a follow up to the summit hosted by the Defense Centers of Excellence in April 2009, which was prompted by Congressional inquiries BIAA initiated last summer.

http://www.biausa.org/elements/policy/president_obama_letter_tricare_cog_rehab.pdf

Insurance coverage of cognitive rehabilitation has been a centerpiece of BIAA's policy efforts for the past three years. The Anthem and United Health Care coverage policies are important victories for people with brain injury as they provide fuel for our TRICARE advocacy and health care reform fight.

BIAA will continue to fight for TRICARE to cover cognitive rehabilitation services to ensure that our returning service members have access to the best health care available.


Health Care Reform Update

On June 9, 2009, the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee released a draft health care reform bill. In summary, the draft would expand Medicaid eligibility to those with incomes up to 150 percent of the federal poverty level, impose federal tax penalties on most individuals failing to purchase coverage, mandate a public plan option, require employers to provide coverage or pay into a pool, and stiffen regulation of private health insurance plans.

Importantly, the plan eliminates life-time insurance caps as well as provides for the establishment of a medical advisory council that will submit a report to the Secretary of Health and Human Services including recommendations on essential health care benefits eligible for credits which includes rehabilitative services. In issuing the report, the council will ensure that the recommendations take into account the needs of diverse segments of the population including persons with disability.

The HELP committee plans to begin considering this bill on June 16, 2009. BIAA will continue to monitor the situation carefully.


NIDRR Grant Forecast

This week, The National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (NIDRR) announced it will include two TBI grant programs in its forecast for 2009. http://www.ed.gov/fund/grant/find/edlite-forecast.html#chart7

The first grant application notice, rehabilitation research and training centers (RRTC) on traumatic brain injury interventions, will be available on June 30, 2009, while the second, RRTC on developing strategies to foster community integration and participation for individuals with traumatic brain injury will be available on July 24, 2009.

BIAA will report on the details of these applications when they are released.


Coalition for Regenerative Stem Cell Medicine update

As part of the Coalition for Regenerative Stem Cell Medicine, BIAA enthusiastically endorses two important pieces of legislation aimed at advancing the therapeutic potential of newborn stem cells, the unique stem cells that can be collected immediately following birth from umbilical cord blood and the cord itself, as well as helping to advance the use of one's own newborn stem cells in regenerative medicine.

HR 1718 - The "Family Cord Blood Banking Act" amends Section 213(d) of the IRS Code to add cord blood banking services as a qualified medical expense. This change will allow individuals and couples to use tax advantaged dollars to pay for umbilical cord blood banking services through flexible spending accounts (FSAs), health savings accounts (HSAs) health reimbursement arrangements (HRAs) or the medical expenses tax deduction.

The "Family Cord Blood Banking Act" will make cord blood banking more affordable for American families and provides incentives to ensure that this valuable health resource is never thrown away.

HR. 2107 - The "Cord Blood Education and Awareness Act of 2009" will provide expectant mothers with straightforward, accurate and easy to understand information about the value of their child's umbilical cord blood stem cells. It will offer a government stamp of approval on all available cord blood banking options and will give expectant parents confidence in the information they are reviewing.

 

Smart Drugs?

I found this article entitled  Building a Better Brain in The April issue of Discover Magazine and thought I would share this excerpt with my readers.

The Attention Edge
Pay attention to this paragraph and you are selectively concentrating on a task or idea while ignoring distractions like that dog barking down the street or your cell phone ringing. In a world of information overload and increasing multi-multitasking, you do not have to suffer from ADHD to have trouble focusing. You need no diagnosis to benefit from drugs that cut through the chaos and help you get things done.

Attention-focusing drugs, of course, have been here for years: Amphetamines, nicknamed “go pills,” were discovered in the late 19th century. By the 1940s these central nervous system stimulants were widely used to treat asthma and had become popular as “pep” and diet pills. They were embraced by members of the armed forces, especially pilots, who had to remain attentive to myriad tasks despite constant danger and fatigue. Rife with serious side effects, including hallucinations, anorexia, and heart problems, dextroamphetamine (trade name Dexedrine, better known as speed) is rarely used today by civilians. But the amphetamine mix Adderall and the amphetamine-related drug methylphenidate (Ritalin, Methylin, Concerta, among others) are commonly prescribed.

Exactly how these drugs work their magic remains unknown, but stimulants like Ritalin and modafinil influence the neurotransmitters dopamine and norepinephrine, which are essential for attention and memory skills. Both drugs inhibit reuptake, or reabsorption, of these neurotransmitters by neurons, thus prolonging their action. Modafinil also indirectly alters the action of glutamate, the main neurotransmitter used by neurons in the brain to send signals down the line. The center of action for all these drugs, says University of California at Davis psychiatrist Michael Minzenberg, is the prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain that is responsible for executive functions like sorting out conflicting thoughts, making choices, predicting events, and exerting social control.

Read the whole thing by clicking here.

Drug may prevent brain injury epilepsy

An FDA drug, rapamycin, has been found to help prevent forms of epilepsy caused by brain injury.  Epilepsy risks increase with the incident of brain injury.

"We hope to shift the focus from stopping seizures to preventing the brain abnormalities that cause seizures in the first place, and our results in the animal models so far have been encouraging," Dr. Michael Wong, senior author of the research, said

The study that included postdoctoral fellow Ling-Hui Zeng appears in the May 27 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience.

Portable Scanning

William Burke of Neurologica wrote me about a project sponsored by Neurologica.  Here is a little of what they do:

According to a Cleveland Clinic study published in the March/April issue of the Journal of the American Healthcare Radiology Administrators, NeuroLogica’s CereTom® Portable Head/Neck multi-slice CT Scanner was found to have a dramatic economic and clinical benefit while imaging Intensive Care Unit (ICU) patients.

 

The study, conducted by Thomas Masaryk M.D., Department Chair of Diagnostic Radiology at Cleveland Clinic, and colleagues, concluded that portable head/neck CT scanning:


1.Provided significant savings in terms of cost and time while providing clinicians with diagnostic images equivalent to that of their fixed full body scanners

2.Allowed the fixed conventional scanner to be dedicated for a greater number of outpatient studies by eliminating the bottleneck of time-intensive ICU patients

3.Eliminated clinical dangers associated with the transport of critically ill patients

 

Oakland man to get $18.3 million after van crash

The Associated Press reports

A federal jury has determined that Ford Motor Co. should pay a 38-year-old Oakland man $18.3 million after he was paralyzed in a crash in a Ford van.

Jurors Wednesday awarded Dax Pierson $12.3 million for medical expenses and lost earnings and $6 million for pain and suffering for the injuries he suffered when the Ford E-350 he was riding in rolled over on an icy freeway in 2005.

At the time of the crash, Pierson was the founder of musical group that was traveling through Iowa on a U.S. tour.

Pierson was belted into his seat, but still suffered multiple fractures of his spine.

In his suit, Pierson claimed that van was defectively designed. Though Ford claimed the driver was going to fast, jurors found that Ford's design of the van had caused Pierson's injuries.

___

Information from: San Francisco Chronicle, http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle
 

Brain Injury Lawyer and Attorney

Timothy R. Titolo resides in Las Vegas. His practice is exclusively personal injury cases. He holds specific interest in cases involving traumatic brain injury (TBI), spine and spinal cord injury (SCI) and auto, motorcycle and truck accidents. He is a member of the Million Dollar Advocates Forum.

Because of his experience handling brain, spine and other  injury cases, Tim has been invited to lecture at over 50 attorney & medical conferences around the country. He has lectured for:

American Association of Justice
North American Brain Injury Society
Brain Injury Association of America
International Brain Injury Association
National Business Institute
Pacific Northwest Brain Injury Association
Oregon Brain Injury Association
Washington Brain Injury Association
Los Angeles County Bar Association
Utah Trial Lawyers Assocation
Utah Brain Injury Association
Nevada Brain Injury Association
Michigan Brain Injury Association
other brain injury affiliated groups
Tim Is a Fellow with AAJ's National College of Advocacy and is recognized for completion of the Advanced Studies of Trial Advocacy Program.
 

The Sad Untold Story

A tremendously important story has gone virtually untold by the media, ignored by our political leaders and unknown to the American public. Despite the extraordinarily high price they have paid, America's severely wounded veterans are enduring humiliating financial hardships of epic proportions. Home evictions, utility shutoffs, car repossessions and foreclosures are commonplace.

Spouses have to give up their jobs to become caregivers, cutting family incomes by up to 50 percent or more. Most disabled vets receive much less in compensation and benefits than they did while on active duty, reducing incomes even further. Many are too dysfunctional to hold a meaningful job, if any, because of the devastating effects of post-traumatic stress syndrome (PTSD) and traumatic brain injury (TBI). 
 

Rick Amato of the Washington Press.  Rick Amato is a radio talk-show host in San Diego and with Washington Times Radio News. Amato Strategic Communications provides consulting services to nonprofit organizations, including veterans causes.
 

There is a great deal of information out there on PTSD and the military, and this may largely be due to the origins of the PTSD diagnosis.

Post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can be considered a "young" diagnosis. It was not until 1980 that the diagnosis of PTSD as we know it today came to be. However, throughout history, people have recognized that exposure to combat situations can have a profound negative impact on the minds and bodies of those involved in these situations.

In fact, the diagnosis of PTSD originates from observations of the effect of combat on soldiers. The grouping of symptoms that we now refer to as PTSD has previously been described in the past as "combat fatigue," "shell shock," or "war neurosis."

It is not surprising that high rates of PTSD have been found among soldiers from World War II, the Vietnam War, the Persian Gulf War, and the war in Iraq.

 Rick's perspectives include getting congress to put soldier and veterans disability right to top of the stimulus packages being authorized of late.  He quotes President Reagan "Until our politicians feel the heat, they won't see the light."

Read the whole article  in the Washington Press including a specific case of a military couple struggling to endure.

 

BIAA Legislative Update June 5, 2009

This in from the Brain Injury Assocation:

Brain Injury Association of America
Policy Corner E-Newsletter -- June 5, 2009
A weekly update on federal policy activity related to traumatic brain injury
__________________________________________________________________

In This Issue:
Health Care Reform Update
conTACT Act of 2009
Proposed NIDDR Priorities
_____________________________________________________________________
The Policy Corner is made possible by the Centre for Neuro Skills, James F. Humphreys and Associates, and Lakeview Healthcare Systems, Inc. Brain Injury Association of America gratefully acknowledges their support for legislative action.
_____________________________________________________________________
Health Care Reform Update

Currently, the Senate Finance Committee has reached no consensus on major provisions of the anticipated health care overhaul, raising doubts that it will be considered this month. Committee members remain at an impasse in part because members still lack a clear picture of what potential policy choices would cost.

The Congressional Budget Office (CBO), which estimates what legislation will cost the taxpayers, is scrambling to analyze dozens of policy options the committee is considering. Without cost estimates, lawmakers say it is difficult to decide which provisions they can support. (CQ)

BIAA will continue monitoring the situation closely.

 

The bill would require the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) to convene a conference to adopt official concussion guidelines. The bill would also provide grants to states for the purpose of ensuring that elementary and secondary schools implement these guidelines by funding computerized pre-season baseline and post-injury neuropsychological testing for student athletes.

If you have yet to take action, you may still participate by clicking the link below:

http://capwiz.com/bia/issues/alert/?alertid=13479091


BIAA Submits Comments to NIDRR in Response to Proposed Priorities for RRTCs

This week, BIAA submitted comments to the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (NIDRR) specifically regarding the fourth priority included in the proposed plan for the Rehabilitation Research and Training Centers (RRTCs) entitled, "Developing Strategies to Foster Community Integration and Participation for Individuals with Traumatic Brain Injury."

BIAA expressed strong support for the inclusion of a brain injury related research priority. However, BIAA also detailed some concerns related to the strategies used in the priority to foster community integration and participation for affected individuals. As proposed, this priority would develop a classification system based on symptoms experienced by individuals with TBI who are living in the community.

BIAA explained that no two brains are alike and each and every individual presents with different symptoms, and each injury results in different challenges. Therefore, trying to categorize these injuries could be counterproductive to the priority's goal.

BIAA also suggested several suggestions in lieu of a categorization strategy. For further reading, the full text will be posted on BIAA's web site shortly.

 


BIAA mobilizes Grassroots Advocates in Support of The conTACT ActOn Thursday, June 4, 2009, BIAA circulated an action alert with the intent to urge members of Congress to sign on to HR 1347, the Concussion Treatment and Care Tools Act of 2009(ConTACT Act).

 

Nevada Woman Abuses Brain Injured Sister

The risks and prognosis of those who suffer brain injury go on well after the time of injury.  Here is a story about a woman's sister being abused 15 years after brain injury.  The sad reality of what can happen is seen here.

A Carson City woman is scheduled to stand trial in June on a misdemeanor battery charge while authorities continue to investigate felony abuse allegations in the death of her disabled sister.

A home health nurse reported allegedly seeing Patricia VonDracek, 50, slap and punch her disabled sister, 55-year-old Sandra VonDracek in April.

According to police reports, sheriff's Deputy Josh Stagliano said Patricia VonDracek denied hitting her sister, but Sandra, who has a brain injury from a traffic accident 15 years ago, said Patricia hit her often.

Stagliano called paramedics and had Sandra VonDracek, a Navy veteran, taken to the hospital. It was his understanding, according to police reports, that hospital staff would attempt to get her placed into the Veteran's Hospital in Reno and she would not be returned to her sister's care.

Based on the witness and victim's statements, Stagliano submitted a report to the District Attorney's office for a warrant.

On May 21, records show Stagliano and another deputy went to VonDracek's home to serve the arrest warrant. While there, Patricia told them her sister had been returned to her home and died May 15 while sitting in a recliner in the living room.

Stagliano arrested Patricia VonDracek on a single charge of domestic battery and she was jailed on $15,000 bail. He then contacted detectives.

"He was extremely concerned and asked me to look into it," Carson City sheriff's Detective Craig Lowe told the Nevada Appeal.

In his report, Lowe said he located Sandra's remains at a Carson City funeral home and was able to photograph "numerous contusions and what appeared to be scratch marks on Sandra's face."

Lowe had the body taken to the Washoe County Medical Examiner's Office for an autopsy.

Though a cause of death was not determined, the autopsy showed the woman suffered broken ribs and internal bleeding. Toxicology tests and a neurologist's report on a brain examination are still pending.

"According to the attending pathologist, there were signs of non-accidental injuries from numerous incidents," Lowe wrote in the report. He also said Patricia VonDracek's 14-year-old son told police that a week before his aunt died, his mother had stomped on her lower stomach as she lay on the floor.

The boy "claimed he restrained his mother and removed her from the room telling her to calm down and that he would care for Sandra," the report said.

Patricia VonDracek was interviewed by detectives and booked on suspicion of felony domestic battery with substantial bodily harm and felony abuse of a vulnerable person.

Her bail was set at an additional $100,000.

Information from: Nevada Appeal, http://www.nevadaappeal.com


 

Dr. Helen Mayberg For the Defense - Again!

It's nearly impossible to tell if a former soldier convicted of killing an Iraqi family has brain damage because of the method used to scan his brain, a neurologist testified Tuesday.

Dr. Helen Mayberg, a professor at Emory University in Atlanta, said the wrong protocols were used during an MRI of former Pfc. Steven Dale Green. Instead of what amounted to a complete scan of Green's brain, his MRI included pauses between each scan, Mayberg said.
 

I first ran into Dr. Mayberg in a brain injury case I tried before a jury in the early 1990s.  She adamantly said that Positron Emission Tomography (PET) was not useful for corroborating diagnosis of brain injury caused by trauma. Dr. Joseph Wu of UC Irvine said it was one tool used among the others available.  The PET scan Dr. Wu performed was allowed into evidence by the court.

It is very interesting to note that so-called experts hired by defense lawyer firms come up with the same type of testimony in virtually every case.  What ever the treating or plaintiff's expert says is "wrong."

While hired in a criminal case:

Prosecutors called Mayberg to the stand to rebut the May 12 testimony of Ruben Gur, director of neuropsychology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.

Gur, called by the defense, reviewed a 2008 MRI and found Green has brain damage. He made the diagnosis after comparing Green's MRI to scans from 41 other men of roughly the same age without brain injuries. People with such injuries have "major difficulties" restraining their impulses, he said.
 

Defense attorneys have argued that Green's lack of impulse control was a factor in him taking part in the slayings of the al-Janabi family.

Defense attorney Scott Wendelsdorf, while questioning Mayberg, said MRI's don't necessarily tell the entire story of what is happening in someone's brain.

"A normal MRI doesn't mean nothing is wrong with a brain, does it?" Wendelsdorf asked.

"That's a very true statement," Mayberg said.
 

Dr. Mayberg has made a good living testifying against plaintiffs and criminal defendants.  Read about the case by clicking here.

Soldier with Mild TBI Dies of Drug Overdose

Indiana National Guard Sgt. Gerald "G.J." Cassidy, who served his country in Bosnia and Iraq, died alone and ignored in a barracks at Fort Knox from an accidental drug overdose. His fate left a legacy that has changed the lives of thousands of wounded soldiers, Army officials say.

Cassidy began experiencing migraine headaches after a roadside bomb exploded about 11 feet from his Humvee in Iraq in August 2006. With diagnoses of post traumatic stress disorder and mild traumatic brain injury.

One Fort Knox soldier told investigators, "The staff at the WTU did not keep accountability of soldiers and were not making any checks on the welfare of soldiers" with PTSD and brain injury.

On the day Cassidy died, his platoon sergeant reported him at formation when he actually hadn't seen him for two days.

After repeated calls from Melissa Cassidy after she had not heard from him in a couple of days, Sgt. Cassidy was found dead in his chair. A toxicology report from the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology ruled his death accidental, caused by "multi-drug toxicity," compounded by coronary artery disease.

Excerpted from Soldier's hospital death leads to changes as published in Associated Press.  Information from: The Courier-Journal, http://www.courier-journal.com