Brain injuries are common after an automobile collision, and they can occur even when there is no direct head impact. Unfortunately, many cases of brain injury are undiagnosed and unrecognized.
The key to recovery from a brain injury is to realize that injury has occurred. Some of the most common symptoms of mild brain injury are headache, dizziness, confusion, loss of concentration, and problems with memory.
Watch our videos in the playlist below, or browse our articles for some of the newest information we have on brain injury as it relates to automobile collisions.
Articles:
- Aggressive Behavior After Head Injury
- A New Kind of Whiplash-Associated Headache?
- Brain Imaging and Whiplash
- Brain Injury or Chronic Pain: The Importance of Diagnosis
- Brain Lesions in Whiplash Patients
- Cognitive Complaints After Whiplash
- Depression and Post-Concussion Syndrome
- Emotional And Cognitive Sequelae of MTBI
- Mild Traumatic Brain Injury and Reversible Neuropsychological Deficits
- Misconceptions about Brain Injury and Implications for Treatment and Litigation
- MTBI and Working Memory
- Olfactory Function After Mild Brain Injury
- Post-Concussion Syndrome After Mild Brain Injury
- Post-Traumatic Headache and Cerebral Blood Flow
- Predicting Vocational Outcome in MTBI
- Regular chiropractic care may prevent long-term low back pain
- Serum S-100 Levels After Head Injury
- Similarities Between Whiplash and Brain Injury
- Traumatic Brain Injury and Chronic Pain Syndrome
- Two Treatments for MTBI
- Warfarin and Minor Head Injury
- Whiplash and Cognitive Complaints
- Whiplash Pain May Affect Structure of the Brain
- Whiplash: The Neck and the Brain