Brain injuries are classified depending on how they originate. An acquired brain injury (ABI) includes any brain injury acquired after birth. An ABI can result from any number of conditions not considered external, such as tumors, toxins, degenerative diseases, strokes, or oxygen deprivation. A traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a type of ABI involving a physical insult to the brain by an external force, such as a car accident, a fall, a blow to the head, or a sports impact, etc. Having sustained a traumatic brain injury can increase a person’s risk for Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and psychiatric brain disorders.
You would think that if you had a brain injury you would know it, right? Maybe not.
You may not realize that the physical or mental conditions you have been experiencing are because of a brain injury.
Many people come into Grey Matters with depression, anxiety, impulsivity, OCD, anger problems, mood disorders, brain fog, memory or other cognitive issues, and more thinking “that’s just the way they are” only to discover that their brain map shows that they probably sustained a brain injury in childhood and their brain isn’t functioning optimally.
No two brain injuries are alike and no two paths to recovery are the same. However, neurofeedback training can produce improvements in symptoms and help the brain repair itself by addressing specific issues in any brain. Neurofeedback can pinpoint under functioning or dysregulated areas of the brain or abnormal communication between parts and train specifically for symptom relief even years after an injury occurred. A review of 22 studies of neurofeedback training with TBI concluded that:
“All studies demonstrated positive findings, in that neurofeedback led to improvement in measures of impairment, whether subjective, objective, or both.” ¹
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Sources: 1. May G, Benson R, Balon R, Boutros N. Neurofeedback and traumatic brain injury: a literature review. Ann Clin Psychiatry. 2013 Nov;25(4):289-96. PMID: 24199220.