Making Sense With A Brain Injury Expert

By Pamela Hughes


At no point in its evolutionary history was the human being ever the biggest, strongest, or fastest animal around. Literally every other animal of comparable mass was stronger or faster. A gorilla is around five times stronger than an adult human male. Even the chimpanzee is, when the size difference is taken into account, one and one half times stronger than a person. But it was not the gorilla that built great cities. It was not the chimpanzee that built rockets that reached the stars. No, humanity did all that, and it did so by being smarter. Humans created tools and then used those tools to the extent that the only reason other great apes still exist is because humanity allows it. If people really wanted to, they could cull the ape populations until there was nothing left. But evolution has a twisted sense of humor. The thing that facilitated human dominance is also the most fragile part of the body. A the help of brain injury expert is required to heal.

Neurological trauma is far and away one of the worst injuries a person can sustain. The fact of the matter is that while the rest of the human body is fantastic at recuperating from injury, the brain is not. Once a brain is injured, it stays injured. It does not heal or repair itself. It just sits there.

Too much brain trauma can result in death. But those that do not die immediately will be worse off. The ability to speak and the use of fine motor skills are usually among the first to go when the trauma starts to pile up. Then there is the loss of memory. A person may stare at the faces of all the people they have ever cared about but may see nothing more than a group of strangers.

The most high profile sufferers of brain injuries are sports stars, and for good reason. Those who play contact sports like hockey and football are the most vulnerable to such injuries, since a knock to the head is hardly enough to stop a match, unlike in mixed martial arts where even a second of unconsciousness is enough to call a knockout.

The first step in getting help is admitting that help is needed and recognizing that willpower will not be enough. Oftentimes, individuals refuse to see a specialist, mostly out of fear. A fear that by seeing a neurologist, they are admitting that there is something wrong. No one wants to have to worry about their brains continuing to function.

But healthcare in general is not cheap. Specialized care for neurological trauma is definitely not going to come cheap. Then there is also the cost of care afterwards, since some people might need help.

A doctor has to go through medical school. After that is an internship. A doctor may then study under a specialist and learn from them.

Professional players, especially professional football players, are often put in touch with specialists. However, finding a good neurologist will not be as simple as simply searching for one online. See a general physician and ask for a recommendation. Most hospitals will generally have a neurologist on staff.

Scientists speculate that humans evolved to trade physical strength for higher brain function. But that function is a delicate thing. It must be protected.




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