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Scott C.
Gottlieb
Injury Law Attorney
29 Riverside Drive
Binghamton, NY 13905
Phone: 607-724-7700
Fax: 607-724-5370 |
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Glossary of Brain Injury Terms
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Click on the first letter of the word from the list above to
go to the appropriate section of the glossary. Contact us if you would like a
personal injury law glossary or one of other legal glossaries for your website.
Legal Glossaries Main Page
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Acceleration: The sudden movement of the
brain inside the skull during an impact which causes
the tearing of neurons and connections deep inside
the brain.
Acceleration/Deceleration: A closed head
injury often sustained in car accidents, where the
brain smashes forwards and then backwards,
rebounding against the walls of the skull, causing
damage to both the frontal lobes and the back of the
brain.
Acquired Brain Injury: An injury to the brain
that probably occurred during birth. An ABI can be
caused by direct neurological insult or indirectly
via metabolic/systemic illness.
Agnosia: Partial or complete inability to
recognize sensory stimuli; perception without
meaning.
Alternating Attention: The ability to perform
tasks that require rapid switching from one response
set to another.
Amnesia: A loss or failure of memory.
Aneurism: Swelling or dilation of an artery
due to a weakened wall.
Angular Gyrus: A convolution in the parietal
lobe, important language functions and intersensory
processing.
Anomia: A difficulty in finding words,
especially in naming objects
Anosmia: Loss of sense of smell.
Anosognosia: A diminished self-awareness of
problems, resulting from information processing
difficulties.
Anoxia: An absence of oxygen supply to an
organ's tissues leading to cell death.
Antecedent: A stimulus or event which
precedes a behavior.
Anterograde: Inability to remember events
subsequent to traumatic brain injury.
Anticipatory Awareness: The ability to
anticipate that a problem will occur as a result of
having some type of deficit. To anticipate a
problem, a person must have both intellectual
awareness (i.e. awareness they have a problem) and
emergent awareness (i.e. recognition of when
problems are actually occurring). The person with
problems in this area is unable to realize in
advance of their actions (i.e. anticipate) that a
given problem will cause a particular problem in the
future. Anticipation is one of the important
executive functions of the brain.
Apathy: A direct result of brain injury to
frontal lobe structures which concern emotion,
motivation and forward planning.
Aphasia: Difficulty understanding and/or
producing spoken and written language.
Apoptosis: Cell death that occurs naturally
as part of normal development, maintenance, and
renewal of tissues within an organism.
Apraxia: Impairment in the ability to perform
purposeful acts or to manipulate objects without
paralysis/paresis; can affect oral, verbal and
upper/lower extremity functioning.
Arachnoid Membrane: One of the three
membranes that cover the brain; it is between the
pia mater and the dura. Collectively, these three
membranes form the meninges.
Arachnoid: One of the three membranes holding
the brain together within the skull.
Arousal: The ability to stay awake; one part
of the attention stage of information processing. An
early problem with many survivors is a constant
feeling of drowsiness, sleepiness or inability to
remain alert. This often improves with time.
Arterial Line: A very thin tube (catheter)
inserted into an artery to allow direct measurement
of the blood pressure, the amount of oxygen and
carbon dioxide in the blood.
Ataxia: A disturbance in the coordination of
the muscular movements.
Axon/ Dendrites: Nerve cells in the brain,
which look like small hair-like tentacles. The cells
communicate with each other by passing electrical
and chemical impulses between the tentacles.
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