Title: Module II ______________________________________________________
1Module II_______________________________________
_______________
2Module II Goal______________________________
- To present information about the brain and how
injury to the brain affects the student and family
3Module II Learning Outcomes ______________________
________________________________
- At the end of this module you will understand
- Incidence and prevalence of TBI
- Mechanisms of brain injury
- Wisconsins definition of TBI
- Basic brain structures and functions
- Effects of TBI on student and family
4Brain Injury Why do we need to know about
it?______________________________________________
_______
- More students are surviving serious brain injury
(BI) than ever before - Much of a students recovery from BI occurs AFTER
returning to school
5Brain Injury Why do we need to know about
it?______________________________________________
________
- Students with BI often have difficulty with
learning and behavior that stems directly from
their brain injuries - Educators have many skills we can use once we
understand the needs of students with BI
6Incidence and Prevalenceof BI___________________
____________________________________
- 1 in 500 students sustain an acquired BI each
year in the U.S. - 1 in 25 students will sustain an acquired BI
before high school graduation - Overall twice as many boys as girls
7Brain Injury Three Students_____________________
__________________________________
8Primary Causes of BI by Age______________________
________________________________
- Infants
- Abuse neglect
- Toddlers
- Abuse falls
- Early Elementary
- Falls pedestrian-motor vehicle accidents
9Primary Causes of BI by Age______________________
_________________________________
- Late elementary/Middle school
- Pedestrian-bicycle accidents
- Pedestrian-motor vehicle accidents
- Sports
- High school
- Motor vehicle accidents
- (Savage Wolcott, 1994)
10Brain Injury Terms Definitions
_________________________________________________
______
- Acquired Brain Injury
- Congenital and Perinatal Brain Injury
- Traumatic Brain Injury
- Open Head (brain) Injury
- Closed Head (brain) Injury
11Acquired Brain Injury___________________________
____________________________
- Brain injury incurred after a period of normal
development - Internal causes
- External causes
12Congenital and PerinatalBrain Injury____________
__________________________________________
- No period of normal development
- Congenital a condition a child is born with
(e.g., metabolic disorder, chromosomal
abnormality) - Perinatal a condition that develops around the
time of birth (e.g., perinatal stroke)
13Traumatic Brain Injury ___________________________
____________________________
- TBI in Wisconsin Schools
- Occurs after a period of normal development
- Not congenital, degenerative, or due to birth
trauma - Occurs as a result of external physical force to
the brain (e.g., as a result of a bike or car
accident or a gunshot wound) - Meets WI PI 11 criteria for TBI
14Types of Traumatic Brain Injury__________________
_____________________________________
- Open Head/Brain Injury Brain injury in which the
skull, meninges, and brain are penetrated by an
external object (e.g., gunshot) - Closed Head/Brain Injury Brain injury in which
the skull and meninges are NOT penetrated (e.g.,
head hits the dashboard)
15Open Head/Brain Injuries_________________________
______________________________
- Penetrating Injuries
- Projectiles such as bullets or nails
- Sledding accidents
- More likely to experience seizures than closed
head injuries
16Closed Head/Brain Injury_________________________
______________________________
- Anoxic Episodes
- Near-drowning
- Strangulation
- Smoke inhalation
- Focal Injuries
- non-penetrating blows
- Acceleration/ deceleration Injuries
- Falls
- Vehicular accidents
- Shaken baby syndrome
- Sports accidents
17Closed Head/Brain Injuries_______________________
________________________________
- More common than open head/brain injuries
- Cause more diffuse damage to the brain than open
head/brain injuries - Coup/contracoup mechanism of injury
18Mechanism of injury Coup/Contracoup_____________
_________________________________________
Reprinted with permission from the North Carolina
Department of Public Instruction
19Primary Effects of Closed Head/Brain
Injury___________________________________________
___________
- Injury to brain tissue at the site of coup and
contracoup - Shearing and tearing of neurons throughout the
brain
20The Neuron_______________________________________
_______________
- Graphic courtesy of Marshfield Clinic
21The Neuron_____________________________________
- Gray matter nerve cell bodies
- White matter nerve axons coated with a myelin
sheath - Myelinization facilitates rapid transmission of
impulses along the axon - Bundles of neurons make up nerves that run from
the brain to the spinal cord
22Secondary Effects of Closed Head/Brain
Injury___________________________________________
____________
- Bleeding (contributes to increased intracranial
pressure) - Swelling (contributes to increased intracranial
pressure) - Lack of oxygen to the brain (results in cell
death)
23Before and After BI______________________________
________________________
24Types of Brain Injury____________________________
__________________________
25Predictors of Outcome after BI___________________
___________________________________
- Duration of coma
- Post-traumatic amnesia (PTA)
- Age
- Location of injury
- Pre-injury functioning
- Support systems
26Outcome Predictors Coma_________________________
_____________________________
- Coma is a state of unconsciousness in which the
person cannot be aroused or does not respond,
even to painful stimuli - Coma is measured along a continuum of levels of
responsiveness - No or brief coma is generally a more positive
predictor than longer coma
27Coma Scales ______________________________________
________________
- Assess responsiveness to environmental stimuli
- Examples
- Glasgow Coma Scale
- Rancho Los Amigos Scale of Cognitive Levels
28Outcome PredictorsPost-Traumatic Amnesia
(PTA)____________________________________________
__________
- Retrograde Failure to remember events leading up
to injury - Anterograde Failure to accumulate new memories
after injury
29Outcome Predictors Age__________________________
____________
- Young children are especially vulnerable to the
effects of brain injury - Previously developed skills may be preserved
after brain injury, but new learning may be
difficult - Effects of brain injury may not be apparent until
more advanced skills are expected to develop
30Other Outcome Predictors ________________________
______________
- Location of injury
- Pre-injury functioning
- Support systems
31Severity of BI Mild_____________________________
_________________________
- Brief or no loss of consciousness
- Signs of concussion
- Nausea and vomiting
- Headache
- Fatigue
- Dizziness
- Poor recent memory
- Post traumatic amnesia less than 1 hour
- GCS of 13-15
32Severity of BI Moderate_________________________
______________________________
- Coma less than 24 hours
- Post-traumatic amnesia 1- 24 hours
- GCS of 9-12
33Severity of BI Severe___________________________
____________________________
- Coma more than 24 hours
- Post-traumatic amnesia more than 1 day
- GCS 3-8
34Student examples_________________________________
______________________
35How does a student with BI qualify for special
education services?______________________________
________________________
- To be identified as a student with TBI, the
student must meet the Wisconsin definition of TBI - Not all students with BI meet the Wisconsin
criteria for TBI
36Traumatic Brain InjuryWhat is it?
__________________________________________
- TBI became a special education handicapping
condition in IDEA in 1990 - TBI was added to Wisconsins special education
law (Chapter 115) and rules (PI 11) in 1995. - TBI is one of 11 areas of impairment listed in
Wisconsin Chapter 115
37Wisconsin Definition of TBI______________________
_________________________________
- The Wisconsin TBI definition has four parts
- The entire definition from Wisconsin PI ll is
printed on the next page of your manual
38Wisconsin TBI Definition Part 1_________________
______________________________________
- Traumatic brain injury
- an acquired injury to the brain
- caused by an external physical force
- resulting in total or partial functional
disability or psychosocial impairment, or both - adversely affects a childs educational
performance
39TBI Definition (part 1 cont.)____________________
___________________________________
- open or closed head injuries
- impairments in one or more
- cognition speech and language memory
attention reasoning abstract thinking
communication judgment problem solving
sensory, perceptual and motor abilities
psychosocial behavior physical functions
information processing and executive functions
40TBI Definition (part 1 cont.)____________________
____________________________
- Executive functions are planning, prioritizing,
sequencing, self-monitoring, self-correcting,
inhibiting, initiating, controlling or altering
behavior. (Savage Wolcott, 1995, p. 150).
41TBI Definition (part 1 cont.)____________________
___________________________________
- The term does NOT apply to brain injuries that
are congenital or degenerative, or brain injuries
induced by birth trauma
42TBI Definition Part 2___________________________
____________________________
- Acquired injuries to the brain caused by INTERNAL
occurrences are NOT TBI - Injuries due to INTERNAL causes MAY meet criteria
for other areas of impairment
43TBI Definition Part 3___________________________
____________________________
- Standardized and norm-referenced instruments may
not be reliable or valid - Alternative means of evaluation shall be
considered
44TBI Definition Part 4___________________________
____________________________
- Before a child may be identified with TBI
available medical information from a licensed
physician shall be considered.
45Incidence of TBI in Wisconsin Schools___________
___________________________________________
- 431 students identified with TBI per PI 11
criteria (as of December 1, 2005)
46The Brain________________________________________
______________
- Weighs about three pounds and is the consistency
of jello - Contains billions of neurons
- Videotape (optional)
47Components of the Brain__________________________
_____________________________
- 1. Brainstem
- 2. Cerebellum
- 3. Basal Ganglia
- 4. Diencephalon
- 5. Limbic System
- 6. Cerebral Cortex
- See Brain Surface map on next page
-
48The Brainstem____________________________________
___________________
- At the base of the brain above the spinal cord
- Comprised of the medulla, pons, and midbrain
- Responsible for basic life functions
- Severe injury causes death
49The Cerebellum___________________________________
___________________
- Primarily helps modulate motor responses
- Regulates direction, rate, force, and steadiness
- Injury disrupts coordination and muscle tone
50Basal Ganglia____________________________________
__________________
- Nerve cell clusters involved with regulation of
physical movement - Injury results in involuntary movements, slowness
or tremor
51The Diencephalon_________________________________
_____________________
- Main organs thalamus and hypothalamus
- Hypothalamus controls hunger, thirst, sleep,
body temperature, hormones important role in
emotional regulation - Thalamus relays information regarding sensation
and movement
52The Limbic System________________________________
______________________
- Main organs hippocampus and amygdala
- Hippocampus memory retrieval
- Amygdala emotional memories
53The Cerebral Cortex______________________________
________________________
- Center of conscious brain activity
- Divided into two hemispheres connected by the
corpus callosum - The right side of the brain controls the left
side of the body and vice versa - Dominant hemisphere represents language (usually
left hemisphere)
54The Lobes of the Cerebral Cortex_________________
_____________________________________
- Each hemisphere of the brain is divided into four
lobes - Frontal
- Temporal
- Parietal
- Occipital
Reprinted with permission from the North Carolina
Department of Public Instruction
55The Frontal Lobes________________________________
______________________
- Susceptible to injury
- Control executive functions
- Deficits may become apparent as student develops
- Motor cortex
56The Parietal Lobes_______________________________
_______________________
- Receives, analyzes, and integrates sensory and
motor stimuli - Recognizes touch, location in space
- Role in recognizing faces, objects, and ability
to assemble and draw - Spatial neglect
57Motor and Sensory Strips_________________________
_____________________________
- The motor and sensory strips are located on
either side of the central sulcus - The motor strip is responsible for movement
- The sensory strip is responsible for sensation
Reprinted with permission from the North
Carolina Department of Public Instruction
58The Temporal Lobes_______________________________
_______________________
- Receives, analyzes, and integrates auditory
information - Center for language Expressive fronto-temporal
area Receptive tempero-parietal area - Forms memories
59The Occipital Lobes______________________________
________________________
- Receives, analyzes. integrates visual
information - Visual disturbances such as restricted vision,
impaired visual recognition, and scanning - Optic nerve travels through the brain to the eyes
60Effects of Brain Injury Infants and Toddlers
_________________________________________________
______
- The very young brain is like custard
- Limited head control results in shearing of
brain - Open fontanels mean less brain protection
- More frequent seizures than older children
- Motor and expressive language skills susceptible
- Interrupted synaptic connections have cascading
effect - Focal injuries may have better outcome
61Effects of Brain Injury Elementary and Middle
School Students
- During this time the childs brain is
supercharged or rapidly developing - Connections between the two hemispheres of the
brain and within each hemisphere become more
efficient - Brain injury during this period interrupts
development of critical cognitive and
communication skills
62Effects of Brain Injury High School Students
- Myelinization of the frontal lobes and more
efficient connections within the brain facilitate
development of logical thinking and ability to
solve complex problems - Previously developed skills are more resistant to
effects of brain injury - Psychosocial effects of brain injury threaten
adolescents sense of self
63Three Students ___________________________________
____________________
- What types of difficulties in school do you
expect these students to exhibit? - Mike
- Monty
- Serena
- Refer to worksheet on p. 34d
64How can you determine how TBI affects an
individual student?______________________________
__________
- Review the students medical record. What part(s)
of the brain were injured? - Review hospitalization records, discharge
summary, therapist reports. - Ask medical staff how the BI will affect student
functioning. - Ask family members, teachers, and peers what they
are seeing. - Observe/interview the student.
65Can brain injuries be repaired?__________________
____________________________________
- Research tells us
- Once neurons are severed they cannot yet be
repaired. - The brain generates new brain cells, but we do
not yet know how to direct these cells to become
neurons. - Over time the secondary effects of brain injury
subside, new information pathways may develop,
and functioning generally improves.
66What happens to the student and family after the
injury?
67Typical Medical Course for a Student with a
Moderate/Severe ABI______________________________
________________________
- Emergency room
- Regional trauma center if
- necessary
- Surgery if necessary
- Acute care setting (hospital)
- Rehabilitation unit or center
- School
68The Impact of ABI on Families____________________
___________________________________
- Families are in extreme emotional distress after
a childs injury - Parents immediate concern is life and death
- Parents become experts about ABI
69Child and Family Stages after ABI________________
_______________________________________
- Child
- Initial Injury
- Coma
- Rehabilitation
- Reintegration
- Family
- Shock, grief, crisis
- Hope, disruption of family life, fear
- Reestablishing family routines, emerging
awareness of extent of injury, isolation - Altering dreams, long-range planning
70Within The First Year After ABI__________________
_____________________________________
- Emotional resources available to the family
decrease - Family members begin to see evidence of cognitive
and behavioral aftereffects - Family begins to understand that the child may
have permanent impairments -
- (Corbett Ross-Thomson, 1996)
71End of Module II