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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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W X Y Z #
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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Caregivers Conference: A PRN meeting to do
more focused treatment planning and problem solving
for individuals with acquired brain injury. Anyone
on the treatment team can call for a caregiver
conference. Sometimes problems and issues exist in
only one therapy. However, that particular problem
is not just that therapist's issue; it is a team
issue which must be addressed accordingly.
Catheter: A tube which is inserted into any
body part to withdraw or introduce fluids.
Cerebellum: A portion of the brain that
occupies a position in posterior (i.e. back) of the
brainstem. It has a left and right hemisphere as
well as median lobe called the vermis. It regulates
motor coordination and has been implicated in
cognitive functions such as complex attention and
procedural learning.
Cerebral Angiogram: An X-ray picture of the
blood vessels inside the head. A drug is injected
via the groin artery to outline these cerebral
vessels.
Cerebral Cortex: The largest part of the
brain. It controls thought processes (such as memory
and learning) and motor functions (such as walking).
Cerebral: Concerning the brain.
Cerebrum: The largest part of the brain;
controls voluntary or willed movement and the
ability to create rational thought. Such
capabilities are only possessed by human beings. The
cerebrum is made up of frontal, temporal, parietal
and occipital lobes divided into halves.
Closed Head Injury: An injury that occurs
when the head suddenly and violently hits an object,
but the object does not break through the skull.
Cognition: The mental process or faculty of
knowing; may be simple or complex, and includes
psychological (past/present) cognitive and
physiological medical/neurological factors.
Cognitive Retraining Rehab: Therapeutic
intervention aimed at facilitating the recovery of
mental skills disrupted as a result of brain injury.
Coma: Long periods of unconsciousness. The
depth may vary from no response to stimulation to a
slight awakening. Depth and length often affect the
quality of recovery.
Compressive Cranial Neuropathies:
Degeneration of nerves in the brain caused by
pressure on those nerves.
Computed Tomography (CT): A scan that creates
a series of crosssectional X-rays of the head and
brain; may also be called a computerized axial
tomography or CAT scan.
Concussion: Injury to the brain caused by a
hard blow or violent shaking, causing a sudden and
temporary impairment of brain function, such as a
short loss of consciousness or disturbance of vision
and equilibrium.
Contrecoup: A contusion caused by the shaking
of the brain back and forth within the confines of
the skull.
Contusion: Distinct area of swollen brain
tissue mixed with blood released from broken blood
vessels.
Corpus Callosum: The band of commissural
fibers which connects the two hemispheres of the
brain and allows for rapid and effective
interhemisphere communication.
Cortex: The outer convoluted surface of the
brain that is composed of nerve cell bodies and
their synaptic connections. It is the highest and
most complexly organized center of the brain. The
cortex is typically divided into four main lobes:
frontal, temporal, parietal and occipital.
Cortical Dysplasia: An abnormality in the
growth, size and/or shape of cells.
Coup-Contrecoup: When the brain is hit with
sufficient force, it will "bounce" against the
opposite side of the skull causing injury to both
the site of impact (coup) and the part of the brain
opposite the impact (contrecoup).
Cranial Nerves: 12 pairs of nerves which have
their origin in the brain stem.
Craniotomy: Surgical removal of the skull in
small pieces.
Cranium: The bony skull which completely
engulfs the brain to protect it.
CSF Fistula: A tear between two of the three
membranes - the dura and arachnoid membranes - that
encase the brain.
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