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Journal ArticleDOI

Cerebral Hemodynamics and Metabolism Following Experimental Head Injury

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TLDR
The present experiments were undertaken to clarify the nature of acute cerebral disorders resulting from head injury and based on experimental observations of concussion produced by a pendulum striking the freely moving head, it was concluded that this type of concussion was due to temporary paralysis of nervous function.
Abstract
T HE pathogenesis of cerebral concussion has long been debated. The present experiments were undertaken to clarify the nature of acute cerebral disorders resulting from head injury. Concussion was defined by Denny-Brown as a "transitory and reversible nervous reaction with immediate onset following physical stress of sufficient violence and brevity, and characterized by progressive recovery thereafter. ''~ There are two main theories concerning the pathogenesis of concussion: the excitation theory of Walker, e t al., 4a and the paralytic theory of Denny-Brown and Russell2 These two theories, which postulate opposite mechanisms, will be reviewed. Walker and his associates 43 observed the appearance of fast activity in the electroencephalogram (EEG) with little change in amplitude immediately after a compressive impact applied to the exposed dura and brain in experimental animals. This was followed by '"extinction." The EEG changes were frequently accompanied by tonic extension movements of the extremities. They suggested that this type of concussion resulted from excitation of the central nervous system. An opposite view was proposed by Denny-Brown and Russell. Based on experimental observations of concussion produced by a pendulum striking the freely moving head (acceleration concussion), they concluded that this type of concussion was due to temporary paralysis of nervous function. In man, concussion is characterized by transient loss of neural function, accompa-

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Measurement of Head Impacts in Collegiate Football Players: Relationship Between Head Impact Biomechanics and Acute Clinical Outcome After Concussion

TL;DR: It is suggested that football players are concussed by impacts to the head that occur at a wide range of magnitudes and that clinical measures of acute symptom severity, postural stability, and neuropsychological function all appear to be largely independent of impact magnitude and location.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in volumetric and metabolic parameters relate to differences in exposure to sub-concussive head impacts:

TL;DR: The results provide novel insight into the effects of sub-concussive collisions on brain structure and cerebrovascular physiology and emphasize the importance of multi-modal imaging for a complete characterization of cerebral health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cerebral blood flow and brain stem lesion

TL;DR: The data indicate that CBF reduction may result from both extensive destruction of the cerebral pallium and from states in which the cerebral cortex is out of function due to damage at lower levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pathogenetic Mechanism of Cerebral Concussion due to Rotational Angular Acceleration Impact

TL;DR: There was no variation in amplitude or latency of the brain stem response to auditory stimulation, but the somatosensory response at the sensory cortex changed to a low amplitude of elongation of the latency in the concussion caused by the rotational acceleration impact.
Book ChapterDOI

Post-traumatic brain swelling.

TL;DR: Brain swelling may be due to an increase in the cerebral blood volume (CBV) (engorgement or hyperemia), to an increases in the amount of extra or intracellular water (oedema) or to an extra mass.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Brain stem reticular formation and activation of the EEG

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that reticular activation is associated with the activation of the reticular formation of the brain stem, and that reticulus activation can be induced by low frequency stimulation of the diffuse thalamic projection system, rather than intra-cortical spread following the arrival of afferent impulses at the sensory receiving areas of the cortex.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relationships of pyruvate and lactate during anaerobic metabolism. I. Effects of infusion of pyruvate or glucose and of hyperventilation.

TL;DR: In shock state associated with a reduced or maintained blood flow, an important proportion of muscle lactate release is regulated by a "2 receptor stimulation and not secondary to a reduced oxygen availability", demonstrating that lactate production during shock states is related, at least in part, to increased NaK-ATPase activity under "2 stimulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental cerebral concussion

D. Denny-Brown, +1 more
- 01 Sep 1941 - 
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