Head Injuries Double or Triple the Risk of Early Death

Byron J. Richards, Board Certified Clinical Nutritionist
Head Injuries Double or Triple the Risk of Early Death
This study comes from a very large Swedish database that followed all persons born after 1954, who had a brain injury. Traumatic brain injury (assuming the person survived the injury for 6 months), resulted in triple the risk for early death. Concussions, a milder form of brain injury, resulted in double the risk for early death. When you consider that 1.7 million Americans each year go the hospital for brain injuries, this is a major issue.

The cause of early death, in both types of head injury, was suicides or accidents. This means that the perception system in the brain, especially the thalamus gland, has not properly recovered from the injury. This causes physical symptoms to remain, including “cat-on-a-hot-tin-roof” mental health symptoms. Disturbance to the thalamus can easily reduce reflexes during aging, thus making it more difficult to avoid an accident.

I have previously explained the nature of this issue in my article, How to Recover from a Concussion – Athletes Take Note. It isn’t just an issue of the impact area of the brain healing. The subconscious brain must also heal. And nutrition can be of extreme value.

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