Posts Tagged ‘Help’

Combat injuries research could help thousands of serious head injury victims

May 1st, 2012 by Trauma_Guide | No Comments | Filed in Head Trauma

Article by sherringtonlaw

It is a sad fact of life, but many of the most rapid advancements in medical treatments come from the battlefield. Military research has always had a financial advantage over civilian research, but thankfully, the military doesn’t keep all the good stuff for themselves. Now, new research into serious head injuries caused by IED (Improvised Explosive Device) blasts and other battlefield injuries is filtering through and could be used to help civilians who have suffered similar types of injuries themselves.

The latest research has resulted in the development of a brain monitor that fits inside a backpack and can instantly transmit massive amounts of electro-physiological data anywhere in the world. The new pack, which can be used in all conditions, is being hailed as a breakthrough in head trauma care, allowing neurophysicians to look at images of a trauma injury in minutes, rather than days. It will also allow those treating the victim at the scene to send data to specialist surgeons who will then be able to recommend the best course of treatment to minimise long-term damage to the brain.

The power of algorithms

But it’s not just the hardware that could help brain injury victims get more accurate treatment. The pack has necessitated the development of advanced algorithms, and these enable the system to show which victims are more likely to suffer late-onset conditions that sometimes accompany head trauma such as PTSD, depression and even schizophrenia. This will allow specialists to predict more accurately what symptoms a head trauma patient may develop and also to plan an effective and preventative treatment method. While the algorithms cannot replace the skills of an experienced clinician spending time with the victim, it could enable potential problems to be flagged early, giving the clinician valuable data to work with.

The most common battlefield head injuries are blast-related and closed head trauma – where the brain is not actually penetrated but can receive a blow that causes swelling. This is also one of the most common types of civilian head injury, so the technology that is about to be deployed in some of the world’s most dangerous war zones certainly will have a role to play in civilian life as well. The current military version being tested will cost between $ 50,000 and $ 100,000 and has already undergone extensive trials at the Uniformed Services University in Bethesda. The unit consists of a cap that is used to monitor the brain’s activity, a control box and a link to a computer that allows the data to be transmitted via the Internet. It is this portability that has excited neuroscientists, making the unit one that can be used anywhere yet still have the capability to link up to specialist neurological units and specialists across the world.

Long term treatment planning

While the unit has the capability to give clinicians an instant view inside the victim’s head and assess the primary injuries, it is in the treatment of the long-term effects that the unit may prove to be most useful. By incorporating the algorithms developed by the team, clinicians will be able to predict far more accurately what possible symptoms a victim will suffer from months or even years later. For such a small unit, this new monitor packs a hefty punch in the fight against long-term brain trauma and could change the way primary care is handled immediately after a serious head injury.

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Mental Health Help : How to Overcome Brain Trauma

March 17th, 2012 by Trauma_Guide | 4 Comments | Filed in Brain Trauma

Athletes or others who suffer brain trauma may exhibit symptoms of dementia, including memory loss and confused speech patterns. Learn how to recognize and get help for a brain trauma victim in this free video on mental health help.Expert: Dr George Northrup Contact: docgmd.com Bio: Dr. George Northrup earned his medical degree at The University of South Florida in Tampa and completed his psychiatry residency at The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz Series Description: A wide range of conditions can impact our mental health, from early dementia and PTSD to depression and anxiety. Get the facts on symptoms and treatment options from an experienced psychiatrist in this free video series.
Video Rating: 0 / 5

Chris Brown looks at new medical proof that sheds light on the severity of damage to late NHL enforcer Derek Boogaard’s brain.

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How Subliminal Techniques Can Help You Overcome Trauma

March 16th, 2012 by Trauma_Guide | No Comments | Filed in Psychological Trauma

Article by Gregory Frost

Trauma is a strong world, used by doctors to describe a catastrophic occurrence that has had an adverse effect on either the physiological or mental makeup of the human body. The more popular definitions for trauma are more psychological in nature, usually stemming from very bad experiences. This is due to the high levels of distress that has been caused by the event itself, a level of distress so high that it pervades all physical barriers and transcends the mind to inflict a scar that takes a very long time (or even never) to heal. The events that cause such psychological trauma are varied and can range from serious injury that often associates itself with a large amount of pain, an assault, robbery or even rape, a great loss in one’s life (emotional), witnessing a death or an accident that is both bloody and vivid, breakdown in the foundations of life or prolonged sexual abuse.

The problem with this psychological trauma is that most of the time, it goes undetected until the wound ‘festers’ to a point where it manifests itself in physical degradation or even manic behaviour or even psychosis. Some of the milder physical symptoms can include pain in the stomach, migraines, palpitations, loss of hair, thinning of the body and even death (rare). Today we are concentrating on the mental damage that such trauma can inflict on the person and how methods that are subliminal in nature can actually help those who are suffering from these problems. For example, someone who has been exposed to a distressing episode can suffer from lapses in his or her cognitive functions like speech, memory or even the ability to maintain a mental focus.

They can also have emotional side effects like sadness, anger, psychosis and depression which have been known to lead to paralysis, malnutrition and even death. Also, there have been cases where trauma has turned the behavioural patterns of the individual on its drastic side – negative behaviour and in some extreme cases, schizophrenia might set in. So how do we overcome this trauma, especially when post traumatic stress therapy has been enforced and some of the symptoms still remain? Many psychologists believe that subliminal techniques are one way to go to cure a person who is suffering from trauma and this trauma is affecting their mental and emotional faculties. The wound is located in the pre conscious mind, a part of the cortex that cannot be seen nor detected, but possibly read by electromagnetic frequency.

What subliminal techniques can do is to bypass the defences of the conscious mind and other cognitive functions, and repair the damage where it is done. It is like using the help of a surgeon to remove a tumour in the brain, instead of using chemotherapy. Subliminal techniques are much more direct and specific in their treatments and the use of visual/auditory stimulants with embedded messages go a long way in treating the wound left in the pre conscious mind by a distressing episode.

Click Here to get your Free ‘Ultimate Success Unleashed’ and achieve success faster. Greg Frost is a self improvement coach and has been helping thousands of people worldwide to achieve their dreams and goals through the use of subliminal messaging cds.







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Please Help; Schizophrenia Getting Worse…?

March 3rd, 2012 by Trauma_Guide | 5 Comments | Filed in Head Trauma

Question by Columbine: Please Help; Schizophrenia Getting Worse…?
I’d like to point out three things:

1.) I’m not on meds or seeking therapy.
2.) I refuse to get help or take medication for my schizophrenia because I benefit more from my schizophrenia than I suffer (plus it gives me more of a push and motivation as a writer and soon-to-be-author… hopefully).
3.) I’m only 13 and my mom has no idea about what I’m going through.

My hygiene is terrible because I am afraid of drains and that something will pop out and get me.

I go long periods of time without going to the bathroom because of the same reason I don’t bathe or shower often, except I’m afraid of it coming out of the toilet.

I’m afraid of things coming out of mirrors, too, and do not look into mirrors at night and every room in my house that has a mirror, a light has to be turned on in there. I don’t know why, but I am afraid.

Air vents scare me because I’m afraid a ghost will come out and get me and sometimes I feel it tugging on my legs and touching me (like my toes or running it’s fingernails down my back).

And to top it all off, I am having an even worse fear of a doll down as the Dutch doll of Finedon. I’m afraid that it has wandered into my home and is going to kill me. I was running around my home last night hiding from her and felt her watching me. Then I snuggled in next to my mom I was so scared and was afraid to come out from under the covers because I feared she would stab me where ever I revealed myself. I imagined her in my doorway and then erased the thought from my head but was too afraid to go into my bedroom in fear her “energy” was still there. This just started happening just yesterday and it’s the worst of all.

I also think people are plotting to get me or hurt me emotionally, listening to my thoughts, reading my texts/emails/writings/drawings (nothing wrong with them), finding every single site I’ve been to or things I do while they’re gone (nothing bad here, either), that people are controlling me or my thoughts (that I’m like a puppet or pawn in some kind of game, or that this world is fake and that I need to somehow “wake up” from it (dream, trauma based fantasy world I’ve set up in my ind to escape the “trauma”).

I am seeing things, hearing things, and seeing things more often but the benefits are still better than the negatives and I’m not willing to give them up.

What should I do about the negatives? It’s driving me crazy (I had to run away from the house earlier today after a bad anxiety attack) and sometimes I just want to kill myself but then I realize every reason I WANT to live in caused by the same things that make me want to END it. It’s so confusing! Help?

Best answer:

Answer by Brittany❥Leah
It is imperative that you seek medical attention asap. I know you said you don’t want to because your mental illness helps your creativity side, but there’s a lot more at stake if you don’t.
The longer you go without treatment, the worse your symptoms will get, and there’s also a chance that you may not come out of it when you do decide to get treated.
However, the sooner you get on medication and attend therapy the higher chance you have of not relapsing.

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Numbness in left side of body, please help?

February 11th, 2012 by Trauma_Guide | 1 Comment | Filed in Head Trauma

Question by ~Kay~: Numbness in left side of body, please help?
Yesterday I started feeling very weird. I felt dizzy and kind of felt like the room was spinning. It also felt like my heart was beating extremely fast. I was laying down with my boyfriend and watching tv at the time. Then all of sudden my left arm started tingling and went sort of numb. I could still move it but it didn’t feel right. I started getting concerned. Then, my face started going numb. I became very upset, I was afraid I was having a stroke. Then about 10 minutes later everything pretty much subsided. I was debating on going to the ER or not but then I decided to. Basically the doctor talked to me and did a CT scan. He said my heart rate was faster than normal but not fast enough to be anything bad. He said the CT scan looked fine, which surprised me because the specialist who did my scan asked me three times “did you have any trauma?” “Are you sure you had no trauma?” This struck me as odd but I guess everything looked fine.
I was in and out of the ER pretty fast. At first the doctor said I might have a virus but then diagnosed me with a migraine, even though I told him I didn’t have a headache. (I’ve had migraines before.) He told me to take tylenol and it would relieve my symptoms.
So I took tylenol and late last night it happened again! I was so scared. This time it started with my arm, then the left side of my face, then my leg then the left side of my stomach and back area. It felt cold too…my bf could actually see the goosebumps on the left side of my body but not my right. I had no headache but because my doctor was pretty sure it was a migraine I just waited until the symptoms subsided enough for me to go to sleep.

I am also only 20 years old and in good health.

Does anyone have any ideas of what is happening to me? I’m very concerned. If it is a migraine, why no headache or head pain?

Please help!

Best answer:

Answer by InvdrZim
Cancer

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