Symptoms of Brain Injury Dementia

July 24, 2008 · Filed Under Symptoms of Alzheimer Disease  Bookmark and Share

Long-term problems can develop after a Traumatic Brain Injury. These include Parkinson’s disease and other motor problems, Alzheimer’s disease, dementia pugilistica, and post-traumatic dementia. If you or someone you love has developed a long term problem as a result of a brain injury, fill out this simple form today for a free case evaluation.Prolonged or permanent changes in cognition, memory, emotions, or behavior may follow head injury of any severity. The term post–head injury dementia encompasses heterogeneous phenomena, reflecting the range of types and degrees of head injury and the variety of patients who experience them.

Symptoms of brain injury dementia

1. Dementia Due to Head Trauma symptoms and diagnostic criteria follow below. While some of these Dementia Due to Head Trauma symptoms may be recognized by family, teachers, legal and medical professionals,  and others, only  properly trained mental health professionals (psychologists, psychiatrists, professional counselors etc.) can or should even attempt to make a mental health diagnosis. Many additional factors are considered in addition to the Dementia Due to Head Trauma symptoms in making proper diagnosis, including frequently medical and psychological testing considerations.

2. Common symptoms of a subdural hematoma in infants include a disproportionate and enlarged head circumference, a swollen fontanel (the soft membrane-covered gap on an infant’s head) and disjointed sutures (the junction of bones in the skull).

3. Over time, people with dementia may begin to act very different. They may become scared and strike out at others, or they may become clingy and childlike. They may stop brushing their teeth or bathing. Later, they cannot take care of themselves. They may not know where they are. They may not know their loved ones when they see them.

4. The condition, which occurs in people who have suffered multiple concussions, commonly manifests as dementia, or declining mental ability, problems with memory, and parkinsonism, or tremors and lack of coordination. It can also cause speech problems and an unsteady gait. Patients with CTE may be prone to inappropriate or explosive behavior and may display pathological jealousy or paranoia. Individuals displaying these symptoms also can be characterized as “punchy,” another term for a person suffering from dementia pugilistica.

5. Many of us often experience forgetfulness. We may forget where we put the car keys or repeat the same story to a friend or family member. These behaviors are usually caused by the information overload of our busy, stressful lives - it doesn’t mean that we’re developing dementia. As people age, they may experience memory changes such as slowing of information processing. This type of change is normal. By contrast, dementia is progressive and disabling and not a normal part of aging.

6. Individuals experience different combinations of these symptoms depending on the part of the head injured, the force of the blow, the damage caused, and the person’s personality before the injury. Some symptoms appear rapidly, while others develop more slowly.









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