What happens when you have a concussion? - Clifford Robbins

2,293,822 views ・ 2017-07-27

TED-Ed


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Each year in the United States,
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players of sports and recreational activities
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receive between 2.5 and 4 million concussions.
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How dangerous are all those concussions?
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The answer is complicated,
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and lies in how the brain responds when something strikes it.
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The brain is made of soft fatty tissue, with a consistency something like jello.
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Inside its protective membranes and the skull's hard casing,
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this delicate organ is usually well-shielded.
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But a sudden jolt can make the brain shift
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and bump against the skull's hard interior,
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and unlike jello, the brain's tissue isn't uniform.
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It's made of a vast network of 90 billion neurons,
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which relay signals through their long axons to communicate throughout the brain
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and control our bodies.
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This spindly structure makes them very fragile
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so that when impacted, neurons will stretch and even tear.
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That not only disrupts their ability to communicate
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but as destroyed axons begin to degenerate,
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they also release toxins causing the death of other neurons, too.
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This combination of events causes a concussion.
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The damage can manifest in many different ways
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including blackout,
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headache,
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blurry vision,
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balance problems,
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altered mood and behavior,
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problems with memory, thinking, and sleeping,
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and the onset of anxiety and depression.
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Every brain is different,
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which explains why people's experiences of concussions vary so widely.
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Luckily, the majority of concussions fully heal
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and symptoms disappear within a matter of days or weeks.
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Lots of rest and a gradual return to activity
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allows the brain to heal itself.
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On the subject of rest,
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many people have heard that you're not supposed to sleep
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shortly after receiving a concussion because you might slip into a coma.
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That's a myth.
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So long as doctors aren't concerned there may also be a more severe brain injury,
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like a brain bleed,
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there's no documented problem with going to sleep after a concussion.
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Sometimes, victims of concussion can experience something
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called post-concussion syndrome, or PCS.
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People with PCS may experience constant headaches,
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learning difficulties,
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and behavioral symptoms that even affect their personal relationships
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for months or years after the injury.
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Trying to play through a concussion, even for only a few minutes,
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or returning to sports too soon after a concussion,
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makes it more likely to develop PCS.
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In some cases, a concussion can be hard to diagnose
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because the symptoms unfold slowly over time.
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That's often true of subconcussive impacts
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which result from lower impact jolts to the head
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than those that cause concussions.
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This category of injury doesn't cause noticable symptoms right away,
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but can lead to severe degenerative brain diseases over time
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if it happens repeatedly.
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Take soccer players, who are known for repeatedly heading soccer balls.
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Using a technique called Diffusion Tensor Imaging,
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we're beginning to find out what effect that has on the brain.
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This method allows scientists to find large axon bundles
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and see how milder blows might alter them structurally.
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In 2013, researchers using this technique discovered
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that athletes who had headed the ball most,
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about 1,800 times a year,
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had damaged the structural integrity of their axon bundles.
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The damage was similar to how a rope will fail
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when the individual fibers start to fray.
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Those players also performed worse on short-term memory tests,
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so even though no one suffered full-blown concussions,
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these subconcussive hits added up to measurable damage over time.
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In fact, researchers know that an overload of subconcussive hits
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is linked to a degenerative brain disease known as Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy,
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or CTE.
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People with CTE suffer from changes in their mood and behavior
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that begin appearing in their 30s or 40s
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followed by problems with thinking and memory
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that can, in some cases, even result in dementia.
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The culprit is a protein called tau.
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Usually, tau proteins support tiny tubes inside our axons called microtubules.
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It's thought that repeated subconcussive hits damage the microtubules,
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causing the tau proteins to dislodge and clump together.
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The clumps disrupt transport and communication along the neuron
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and drive the breakdown of connections within the brain.
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Once the tau proteins start clumping together,
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they cause more clumps to form
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and continue to spread throughout the brain,
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even after head impacts have stopped.
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The data show that at least among football players,
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between 50 and 80% of concussions go unreported and untreated.
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Sometimes that's because it's hard to tell
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a concussion has occurred in the first place.
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But it's also often due to pressure or a desire to keep going
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despite the fact that something's wrong.
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This doesn't just undermine recovery.
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It's also dangerous.
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Our brains aren't invincible.
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They still need us to shield them from harm
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and help them undo damage once it's been done.
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