TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURIES 5
typical complaints of the patient with a mild TBI. The patient, suffering from a mild TBI, may
remain conscious or may lose consciousness for a few seconds or minutes. P. Pangilinan (2012)
cites the study carried out by Kraus and colleagues of 235 patients. It demonstrates the most
commonly reported symptoms after 6 months of mild TBI. They are fatigue (43%), weakness
(43%), memory deficits (40%), headache (36%), and dizziness (34%). Behavioral or mood
changes, confusion, and trouble with memory, concentration, attention, or thinking constitute
cognitive and emotional symptoms. Symptoms that are typical for a mild TBI may also be
present in moderate and severe injuries.
A long-lasting headache, repeated vomiting or nausea, convulsions, an inability to
awaken, dilation of one or both pupils, slurred speech, aphasia, dysarthria, weakness or
numbness in the limbs, loss of coordination, confusion, restlessness, or agitation are
characteristics of a moderate or severe TBI. Cognitive and social deficits have long-term
consequences for the daily lives of people with moderate and severe TBI. C. Werner and K.
Engelhard (2007) notes, that severe TBIs are characterized by increased intracranial pressure
with its manifestations of decreasing level of consciousness, paralysis or weakness on one side of
the body, a blown pupil, Cushing's triad, anisocoria, and abnormal posturing.
The most common signs and symptoms related to TBI are insomnia, cognitive decline,
posttraumatic headache, and posttraumatic depression. Medical complications associated with
TBI include posttraumatic seizures (frequently occur after moderate or severe TBI),
hydrocephalus (communicating or noncommunicating on the basis of the causative obstruction),
deep vein thrombosis (with an incidence of 54% in persons with TBI), heterotopic ossification
(possible during the first 3-4 months after injury), posttraumatic agitation, and others.