| PROVING
A BRAIN INJURY OCCURRED [ back
to Brain Injury 101 ]
Most traumatic brain injuries are "mild," meaning
they cause only a "mild" disturbance of consciousness
when the injury is inflicted, which is manifested more by
dazing, confusion or disorientation than by outright loss
of consciousness. Neurologists, physiatrists and neuropsychologists
who treat patients with so called "mild" brain
injuries know that these people experience long term or even
permanent ill effects, including insomnia, fatigue, dizziness,
imbalance, irritability and decreases in the ability to concentrate,
to remember new information, to organize complex information,
to make decisions and alter decisions in a quick, adaptive
manner to the rapidly changing circumstances at work or home.
Yet, these "mild brain injuries" are frequently
dismissed by primary care physicians, insurance adjusters
and defense lawyers. Why? Because the people who have them
are not in wheelchairs, because they look normal, dress normal,
walk normal and talk normal, even if they can't remember what
they did 5 minutes earlier. Still worse, their brain injuries
do not show up on static neuroimaging such as CT and MRI.
To make the invisible injury visible requires an experienced
eye and a certain amount of ingenuity.
Objectifying the "mild" brain injury, making it
visible and proving it exists is the job of the neurolawyer.
This job is comparatively easy when the injury involves blunt
head trauma, coma and a positive CT scan which discloses a
large intracranial hematoma. This job is much more challenging
and difficult in cases of mild brain injury where the CT scans
and MRIs come out completely negative and the client has sustained
a transient alteration of consciousness at the accident scene
but is coherent, oriented and alert when he gets to the emergency
room. For this reason, neurolawyers utilize neuropsychological
testing , SPECT scans and PET scans to bring out subtle abnormalities
in brain function that are more characteristic of TBI than
of pre-existing psychological problems, pre-existing learning
disability, litigation stress or malingering. Neurolawyers
also use non-medical evidence to contrast their client's quality
of pre and post functioning, including records of school and
job performance and testimony from family, friends, work colleagues,
co-participants in sports and the client's priest, pastor,
minister or rabbi. In certain cases, sleep studies may
even be used, to capture involuntary, night-time awakenings
which the client does not remember, but which may be responsible
for the tremendous fatigue he feels upon waking each day.
Some of the research which confirms organic brain damage from
"minor" head injury without loss of consciousness
is fascinating, but unlikely to be useful in Court, either
because the research is too new and needs validation by other
scientists or because it is so technical and so complex that
jurors cannot relate to it. An ongoing research project at
the UCLA Dept. of Radiology (reported in the May 2000 Journal
of Neurotrauma) shows that victims of "mild" TBI
have the very same abnormality of glucose metabolism (i.e.
significant under-utilization of glucose) as patients in coma
from severe TBI for a period of 6 months. MRI spectroscopy
(which involves magnetizing protons in the solid parts of
brain cells and then zapping them with a beam of electrons)
has been used to show sub-cellular break down products associated
with damaged neuronal cell walls within days after "mild"
TBI. Radioactive tracers have even been used to show how "mild"
TBI caused mechanical damage to RNA in brain cells, which
leads to cell death because the RNA can no longer instruct
the DNA in the cell nucleus to make the proteins necessary
for cell maintenance, such as rebuilding cell walls.
No matter how the neurolawyer proves his client's brain was
injured by the trauma set in motion by the defendant's negligence,
this is but part of his burden of proof. Proving how, and
to what extent, the injury has adversely effected the client;
whether the injury is temporary or permanent; what, if any,
residual difficulties the client is likely to have 5, 10 or
15 years down the line and what type and amount of care are
reasonably required to restore the client to pre-accident
function are equally important. This is where experts come
in from fields such as vocational economics, neurology, neuropsychiatry,
neuropsychology, physiatry and TBI rehabilitation.
|