Symptoms of a mild brain injury, including confusion and memory loss, can continue to linger in a person up to a year after he has suffered a personal injury. The duration of brain injury symptoms may have a significant impact on claims arising out of automobile accidents or other personal injury matters.
Those findings related to lingering symptoms of mild brain injuries came from a recent study that was conducted on a group of young athletes. The findings of the study were published in the journal Neurology. The study found that young athletes who had suffered a concussion continued to show signs of the injury in their brain scans for months after the injury had occurred. Some of those signs continued to linger for up to a year after the injury. While the findings pertained to young athletes, the same can certainly occur for persons who suffered mild brain injuries in a car accident.
These findings specifically pertain to the long -lasting effects of a mild brain injury on young athletes, but we have known for a while that brain injuries – even mild ones – can have long lasting effects. A brain injury can occur whenever there is any kind of significant jolt or blow to the head or skull. A brain injury does not have to result in loss of consciousness or even swelling or bleeding for it to result in impact. Concussions, for example, are some of the mildest brain injuries, and typically occur in an auto accident or slip and fall accident involving a blow to the head. However, they can result in symptoms that include loss of consciousness for a few minutes, memory loss, confusion, and disorientation.