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Gabrielle Giffords Brain Injury: Doctors Work To Help Giffords' Brain Rewire Itself

AP/The Huffington Post   First Posted: 02/14/11 02:26 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:30 PM ET

Gabrielle Giffords Brain Injury

NEW YORK -- Compared to a sleek new laptop, that three-pound mass of fatty tissue called the brain may not look like much. But when it's injured, it adapts and rewires its circuits in new ways.

That's the kind of flexibility that doctors and rehabilitation specialists hope to encourage in Gabrielle Giffords, the brain-injured Arizona congresswoman.

Details about her recovery have been thin. But members of her staff say she recently began speaking for the first time since the Jan. 8 attack by a gunman in Tucson. Brain injury patients who regain speech typically begin to do that about four to six weeks after the injury, experts say.

Last week, the Congresswoman asked for toast while while having breakfast, her chief of staff told the "CBS Evening News." That was within a month of being shot in the head. The Houston Chronicle noted that doctors at TIRR Memorial Hermann have used the phrase "lightning speed" to describe her recovery thus far.

The New York Times added a number of encouraging details on Sunday night, including Giffords beating one of her nurses at a game of tic-tac-toe and using music to recover her speech:

With a group of friends and family members acting as a backup chorus, Ms. Giffords has been mouthing the lyrics to "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star" and "I Can't Give You Anything but Love, Baby." And as a surprise for her husband, who is celebrating his birthday this month, a longtime friend who has been helping her through her rehabilitation videotaped her mouthing the words to "Happy Birthday to You."

Giffords also briefly spoke with her brother-in-law Scott Kelly by telephone Sunday afternoon as he orbited aboard the International Space Station, The New York Times reported on its website.

"She said, hi, I'm good," her chief of staff, Pia Carusone, told the paper. He is the brother of Giffords' husband, astronaut Mark Kelly.

She has also been receiving bedside briefings from aides on the recent uprising in Egypt and on last week's decision by Republican Sen. Jon Kyl of Arizona not to seek re-election.

"We tell her everything that's going on," Carusone said. "Don't get the idea she's speaking in paragraphs, but she definitely understands what we're saying and she's verbalizing."

Still, recovery for the 40-year-old Giffords will be a long, tough journey, as it is for anyone with a significant brain injury. Patients can make remarkable progress. But experts caution that they shouldn't expect to return to exactly the way they were before.

Too little has been revealed and it's too early to say if Giffords might be able to return to her job in Congress. One expert questioned whether that would be the best thing for her to do.

Most people with such injuries have some level of impairment for the rest of their lives.

Scientists are still unraveling just how the brain works to recover from traumatic injury and how to help it repair as much as possible.

They're dealing with an organ about the consistency of cold porridge. It contains maybe 100 billion densely packed nerve cells, each of which is connected to 1,000 or so other nerve cells, called neurons. Those connections form circuits that are the foundation of the brain's activity.

Brain injuries can disrupt that in several ways. A car accident can smash a head, stretching and tearing brain tissue across a wide area. A penetrating injury like a bullet causes more localized damage, but the force of the impact can also damage neuron connections some distance away from the projectile's path.

Either way, brain injury produces an "utter quagmire" of specific disruptions in brain functioning that doctors have only blunt tools to fix, said Dr. Jonathan Fellus, director of the brain injury program at the Kessler Institute for Rehabilitation in West Orange, N.J.

What all this disruption means to the patient depends on what brain circuits have been affected. People might have trouble reasoning, finding words, remembering things, organizing priorities, recognizing faces, understanding what's said to them, or doing multiple things at once. Or they could have problems walking, reaching, getting dressed or feeding themselves.

So how can the brain get better?

In some cases, brain cells that were impaired or stunned but not killed by the initial injury get back on track. Another surprising factor is that the brain's wiring is not fixed. In response to an injury, neurons can alter their patterns of connections.

For example, if the damaged part of the brain is small enough, new connections might bring in neighboring neurons to stand in for dead ones. Or existing connections can be strengthened, allowing neurons to work together more efficiently than they had to before.

Rewiring can bring in a whole different brain circuit to compensate for a damaged one.

So a person who used to find his way to work just by instinct may come to rely on memorizing the route more formally. Or somebody who struggles to find words may emphasize facial expressions more than before. A patient who has trouble remembering what he sees may compensate by telling himself what he's looking at, bringing in his verbal memory circuitry.

Patients may develop compensation strategies on their own, though more typically they're guided by doctors and therapists, said Dr. Bruce Dobkin, director of the neurologic rehabilitation and research program at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Fellus compares brain rewiring after injury to taking back roads when an interstate highway is damaged. It's a less efficient way to get a job done, he said, and the added effort may help explain why brain injury patients often feel tired or simply fail to accomplish some tasks.

"They have to pace themselves, they have to do things in a more organized way," staying more focused on a task like memorizing a phone number than they had to before, he said.

That's certainly the case with Kim Towns, 47, of Chesapeake, Va., even 23 years after she was shot in the forehead.

"I can't really concentrate like I used to. I get tired really easily, I get depressed," she said. Rather than doing several things at once, "I have to really just sit down and concentrate on one particular subject."

In any case, brain rewiring - scientists call it plasticity - is driven by what a patient is learning and experiencing, said Jordan Grafman, director of the Traumatic Brain Injury Research Laboratory at the Kessler Foundation Research Center in West Orange.

That's why patients should get into rehabilitation as soon as possible, where "people are paid to stimulate you," providing skilled expertise as well as respite for exhausted caregivers, he said.

The time course of recovery can be long. It's most dramatic in the first year, with probably more than a third of patients who survive severe injuries showing improvement by the end of that time, said Dr. Alan Faden of the University of Maryland.

Grafman said progress often slows in the second six months of the first year, becoming perhaps not evident to those who see the patient every day, but noticeable to someone who drops by only every three months.

During the second year, gains are usually minimal but can sometimes be significant, said Grafman. After that, many people show no further improvement, but some do, he said.

The course of recovery depends on things like age - with patients from teens to 40 recovering better than those over 50 to 60 - and how motivated, young and healthy a patient is, the size and location of the injury and even a genetic predisposition to recovery.

But for the most part, brain injury patients will always have some degree of impairment, Grafman said.

That's not necessarily a recipe for misery; it just means people need to adjust, said Grafman, who has studied Vietnam veterans with brain injuries for 30 years.

"I'm always impressed ... at seeing how may of them have lived quite successful lives, having families and kids and working at jobs," he said. They "wind up living, in some sense, an ordinary life."

Giffords might have to make the same kind of adjustment.

Without knowing details of her progress it's impossible to say whether she could return to Congress, Grafman said. A supportive staff might make it possible, he said, but "would it be the best thing for her?"

Impairment can add stress for those who strive to return to a high-pressure job, Grafman said. And over a long period, that added stress could harm their mental abilities even more. Persistent stress kills neurons, he said, and can interfere with memory and decision-making beyond the long-term effects of the brain injury itself.

As it stands now, "Giffords will have strengths that remain. That's what you want to play into," he said, even if it leads to a productive life outside the halls of Congress.

___

Online:

Brain injury information: http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/tbi/tbi.htm

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NEW YORK -- Compared to a sleek new laptop, that three-pound mass of fatty tissue called the brain may not look like much. But when it's injured, it adapts and rewires its circuits in new ways. That'...
NEW YORK -- Compared to a sleek new laptop, that three-pound mass of fatty tissue called the brain may not look like much. But when it's injured, it adapts and rewires its circuits in new ways. That'...
 
 
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11:49 PM on 03/09/2011
My father had brain surgery in the late 70's . Major hospitals in Calif didn't even have neuro brain specialists on staff but temporarily granted staff privileges to a team of specialists who traveled from hospital to hospital.

My father had a tumor in his pituitary gland & instead of working around the spine-they started his surgery above the roof of his mouth & worked back through the brain to get to his Pituitary Gland. While his brain "trauma" was due to a surgical knife ¬ a bullet-many of the residual effects were similar.

He was different after the surgery. Not as noticeable to those who didn't know him well..but my mother often said that she felt as though she has taken one man to the hospital and brought home someone else home. I was a teenager at the time & going through the normal teen stuff w/my parents. It was very difficult to process & adjust to just how much he had changed.

We had been prepared by the surgeons for a number of things that could happen during surgery- but that list was of physical limitations, such as damage to his sight/speech. But we weren't prepared for how brain surgery might permanently alter his personality/coping skills.

On some level he also knew he had changed. He went from being the guy who could fix anything to being the guy who had parts left over when he tried to change the brakes on my mother's car.
12:42 PM on 03/03/2011
As a Traumatic Brain Injury Survivor, and caregiver to a mother whose brain injury was so severe she eventually died, I unfortunately have insight into brain injuries. The bottom line is that the brain is an incredibly complex organ, and is really a collection of many smaller organs that control every aspect of our bodies and minds. No two injuries are the same, and every outcome is different. Even the best neurologists can't predict how any one patient will recover. They aren't hiding anything; they just don't know. And "neural plasticity" is a relatively new concept. Nine years after my injury, I'm still healing and rewiring. I was a writer/journalist who thought I'd never write again, and ended up being able to write a book about my recovery. But my mother, who we thought would recover somewhat (although never fully), died. These things are hard to predict. My prayers are with Congresswoman Giffords. She's getting the best care and hopefully love and compassion and patience, and that's all that can be done.

--Lee Carlson
Author, "Passage to Nirvana"
www.passagetonirvana.com
07:02 PM on 03/01/2011
When a piece of metal rips through your brain and destroys critically important control centers, you are going to have very serious and permanent brain damage. She can only be a shadow of her former self. Of course, the details of her deficits and neuropsychological exam details have not been released. In fact, it seems like they are intentionally withholding the types of details that would allow us to really assess her prognosis. Why can't we get the truth???
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sugar Lee
01:11 AM on 03/10/2011
Re allow us to assess her prognosis. So you are a neurologist? Any neurologist would tell you that it is impossible. And that is the truth that you seek.
08:28 AM on 04/02/2011
Actually I work with brain injury patients all the time and what you say is not true. Neurologist spend a good portion of their time assessing prognosis in patients with strokes and other brain injuries.
09:05 AM on 02/16/2011
What? We are not allowed to question the validity of this whole story? The legitimacy of whether or not Jared Lee Loughner os real or whether or not what we have been told is real? I put up a series of questions and it appears the moderators will not allow them on this page. What is wrong with asking Moderator? Or do you control what people are allowed to say?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OldGent
Alwayswatchin
03:51 AM on 02/16/2011
This young lady needn't do anything else with the balance of her life then to live it. She is finding out through this tragedy, probably even more than she knew, just how special her life is and what her being here means to many. Most have not personally met her, as I have not, but her spirit and demeanor will speak long after we are all gone from this place. My religion is one of the spirit one possesses and the spirit one accepts into their life. Not God, but a Holy Spirit, who passes their special qualities in spirit and communication to present and future generations. I have accepted her spirit into my present as I hope all will or have. This is the closest I ever get to expressing my idea of religion openly so please forgive this. She need only heal and exist for her special family who love her unconditionally. She need not perform miracles for me or any other. She already and always has I suspect. Naturally.
12:39 AM on 02/16/2011
Hey, who's this Loughner guy?? I thought Sara Palin, Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck were to blame for this shooting??
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mxytsplyk
De gustibus non est disputandum
01:16 AM on 02/16/2011
Loughner was the trigger man.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
shutterbabe
“We can't stop here, this is bat country!”
11:01 AM on 02/15/2011
A remarkable woman on an extraordinary journey. We remain by your side, Dear Gabby, and await more news of your miraculous recovery.
10:25 AM on 02/15/2011
...for I am fearfully and wonderfully made.

- Psalm 139:14
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AGooglyMinotaur
Ahh, Theseus. It appears you are out of thread.
09:52 AM on 02/15/2011
I wish the Congresswoman every possible success in her recovery.
09:05 AM on 02/15/2011
You're in our prayers Gabby. Get well soon.
06:31 AM on 02/15/2011
Wasn't there a news reporter in Iraq that got a head/brain injury and he is a fully functioning news reporter again. He got the best therapy that the military has developed and looked to be pretty normal.
07:13 PM on 02/15/2011
I read about a young man who was shot in the head and rehabilitated at the same hospital GG is in. He said he couldn't even sit up on his own when he went in but ran out of there a month later, and is now in grad school studying Chemical Engineering. I found it quite encouraging.
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triplettam
Mind Bender
03:16 AM on 02/15/2011
God bless you Gabby. You make every day a miracle again. But I do need to say something here: If we are going to have a "regulated militia" and unregulated gun ownership, how can people even think of opposing health care reform? What about the guy who might walk up to a meeting asking about what he should do because he lost his job and health care and then gets shot by a member of the regulated unregulated militia? Is he to depend on the likes of Jan Brewer? You can't have it both ways. You either acknowledge the inherent danger of a policy and put in place remedies, or you ignore the danger and allow for "well regulated" death panels.
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Razpooten
Nil homini certum est
02:59 AM on 02/15/2011
Don't know much about Gabbie, but I can see that many appreciate her and love her. I wish her a speedy and as complete recovery as possible.
I think she has much to give to this nation. Right now hope and inspiration emanate from her to all who care.
01:01 AM on 02/15/2011
That's good news!
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
09:41 PM on 02/14/2011
God speed, congress needs you.