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Using Hormones to Heal Brain Injuries; Life Extension is Leading the Way!
I'm going to set you up with the link for a really wonderful article in Life Extension's online magazine, and also bring parts of it to put underneath in order to show you what the article is 'about' in order to REALLY encourage you to venture there and read the whole thing. ALSO, there are other topics in this forum related to brain injury so please navigate with the links above this topic's title and go 'up' to the forum and see the list.
www.lef.org/magazine/mag2012/jan2012_Using-Hormones-Heal-Traumatic-Brain-Injuries_01.htm
Using Hormones to Heal Traumatic Brain InjuriesBy Joseph Carrington
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It can happen without warning: you slip in the shower and hit your head, a car swerves and hits you, a small stroke occurs and suddenly you can't speak, your mobility is limited, and your world shrinks. These are real-life examples of the often intractable effects of traumatic brain injury orTBI. And thanks to the groundbreaking work of Dr. Mark L. Gordon and a handful of forward-looking physicians, there's new hope for the 1.7 million Americans afflicted with this condition. Using cutting-edge hormone replacement techniques, Gordon and his colleagues are helping to change the way we think about traumatic brain injuries, their symptoms - and how to treat them effectively. In his clinical practice, Dr. Gordon is developing new protocols that may revolutionize the devastating impact of traumatic brain injuries. One of the biggest patient populations in need of urgent care are the soldiers returning from the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan. Our story begins with them. Starting with SoldiersTraumatic brain injury (TBI) is often referred to as the "signature wound" of both the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Traumatic brain injury occurs when a sudden trauma to the head disrupts brain function. In both these wars, however, even close proximity to the force of an explosion can be just as devastating. Most of the reported traumatic brain injury among Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom veterans has been traced to improvised explosive devices, or IEDs. "Traumatic brain injury can be caused by a direct impact, or by acceleration alone," explains Dr. Mark L. Gordon, interventional endocrinologist and traumatic brain injury treatment specialist at Millennium Health Centers in Los Angeles. "Brain trauma also causes secondary injury, which takes place in the minutes and days following the injury," he adds. "These processes include alterations in cerebral blood flow and increased pressure within the skull, contributing substantially to damage from the initial injury." Gordon says traumatic brain injury can cause a host of physical, cognitive, emotional, and behavioral effects, some of which can be difficult to detect. Symptoms can appear immediately or weeks to years following the injury. "Insidious traumatic brain injury can be difficult to detect," Gordon says. "Localized damage to the frontal and occipital lobes occurs when the brain collides with the skull. Increasingly, we are discovering that traumatic brain injury is also a causative factor for accelerated hormonal deficiencies." These deficiencies, says Gordon, can cause a host of psychological, physiological, and physical manifestations, including depression, outbursts of anger, anxiety, mood swings, memory loss, inability to concentrate, learning disabilities, sleep deprivation, increased risk for heart attacks, strokes, high blood pressure, diabetes, loss of libido, menstrual irregularities, premature menopause, obesity, loss of lean body mass, muscular weakness, and a number of other medically documented conditions. What's more, Gordon points out that veterans suffering from these forms of psychological damage due to traumatic brain injury are frequently misdiagnosed and have their injury erroneously downgraded to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Moreover, especially in mild traumatic brain injury cases, symptoms at the initial time of injury may go unrecognized or unnoticed, but patients will still develop hormone deficiencies. Unfortunately, the government is slow to accept the link between traumatic brain injury and hormonal deficiencies. Dr. Gordon's Epiphany
By sheer serendipity, many years ago Dr. Gordon provided care for a young man with a history of numerous sports-related head injuries, whose parents were themselves patients at the clinic. The young man's symptoms long outlasted the immediate effects of his acute injury and included loss of concentration, memory, mental energy, focus, and physical well-being, often accompanied by loss of lean muscle mass and an increase in body fat. The parents, familiar with the effects of hormonal imbalances, naturally assumed that their son's problems might reflect an endocrine problem of his own. And indeed, many of his symptoms resembled those of adult patients with so-called hypopituitarism, or loss of pituitary gland function. The pituitary gland is located at the base of the brain and is sometimes called the "master" gland of the endocrine system, because it controls the functions of the other hormone- secreting glands. Gordon, who is nothing if not intellectually curious, hit the books. What he found was startling and life-changing, for himself as a clinician, for his young patient, and now for scores of additional victims of traumatic brain injury. Symptoms of Traumatic Brain Injury Mimic Pituitary DysfunctionDr. Gordon found a wealth of published literature suggesting that traumatic brain injury causes pituitary dysfunction, confirming his initial hunch.1 Although the figures vary between studies, at least 50% (and up to 76%) of traumatic brain injury victims show some loss of pituitary hormone function immediately after the brain injury.2-4 In general, the more severe the original brain injury, the more profound the hormonal deficits, although hormone deficiency or insufficiency (levels in the low "normal" range) are seen even in patients with mild traumatic brain injury.5-9 And while about 58% of patients recover their normal pituitary function within one year of their head injury, a shocking 52% develop new pituitary hormone deficiencies after one year. 10,11 Those deficits include reductions in many different pituitary hormones, including those that regulate the thyroid gland, the adrenal glands (that produce cortisol, DHEA, and other vital hormones), the gonads (where estrogen and testosterone are produced), and growth hormone.3,4,12,13 The severity of the hormone deficiencies correlates strongly with the kinds of symptoms Dr. Gordon was seeing in his patient. For example, patients with growth hormone deficiency or insufficiency had significantly worse disability rating scores, greater rates of depression, worse quality of life, lower energy, greater fatigue, and poorer emotional well-being, compared to brain injury patients with normal hormonal levels.14,15 Dr. Gordon's hunch was borne out: patients with traumatic brain injury often have pituitary hormone deficiencies or insufficiencies, especially in growth hormone. And those defects are closely associated with the persistent neurological, psychological, and emotional deficits that are so tragically common in survivors of traumatic brain injury. And where are you most likely to find a high concentration of survivors of traumatic brain injury? The United States military.
The Combat Connection |
Mardy's Note: YES, it continues on and is JUST as interesting to read, and has more interesting graphics, so go up to the link/above OR use this one here, same link! Hopefully I've made this irresistably tantelizing to go read at their amazing website! Then come on back here to Lumigrate and tell your friends about how we make this education stuff easier by funneling and filtering! Live and learn. Learn and Live Better! ~~ Mardy
www.lef.org/magazine/mag2012/jan2012_Using-Hormones-Heal-Traumatic-Brain-Injuries_01.htm
Live and Learn. Learn and Live Better! is my motto. I'm Mardy Ross, and I founded Lumigrate in 2008 after a career as an occupational therapist with a background in health education and environmental research program administration. Today I function as the desk clerk for short questions people have, as well as 'concierge' services offered for those who want a thorough exploration of their health history and direction to resources likely to progress their health according to their goals. Contact Us comes to me, so please do if you have questions or comments. Lumigrate is "Lighting the Path to Health and Well-Being" for increasing numbers of people. Follow us on social networking sites such as: Twitter: http://twitter.com/lumigrate and Facebook. (There is my personal page and several Lumigrate pages. For those interested in "groovy" local education and networking for those uniquely talented LumiGRATE experts located in my own back yard, "LumiGRATE Groove of the Grand Valley" is a Facebook page to join. (Many who have joined are beyond our area but like to see the Groovy information! We not only have FUN, we are learning about other providers we can be referring patients to and 'wearing a groove' to each other's doors -- or websites/home offices!) By covering some of the things we do, including case examples, it reinforces the concepts at Lumigrate.com as well as making YOU feel that you're part of a community. Which you ARE at Lumigrate!
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