Traumatic Brain Injury and Conversion Disorder in a Veteran’s Atypical Presentation
O. Inanc, B. Garip

TL;DR
A veteran's unusual brain injury symptoms challenge traditional diagnosis methods, suggesting a need for new diagnostic approaches.
Contribution
The paper proposes a new perspective on traumatic brain injury diagnosis by highlighting atypical symptoms and conversion disorder.
Findings
Atypical TBI symptoms can be misdiagnosed as conversion disorder.
High-kinetic-energy injuries may cause brain damage through pressure waves.
Current imaging may miss microscopic brain damage.
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) induces cognitive and behavioral changes due to environmental impacts on brain tissue. Highlighting the atypical TBI presentation challenging conventional diagnostics and obscured by conversion disorders. A 36-year-old male veteran, injured by a sniper rifle in 2011, presented with right ear tinnitus and monthly, unresponsive right hemicranial headaches. Seizures occurred every two weeks with no reported loss of consciousness or sensation. The gunshot wound to the neck in 2011 prompted emergency intervention, with entry and exit wounds located in the posterior lateral neck. Post-injury symptoms comprised hearing loss, tinnitus, restricted neck movement, and weakness in the right arm. Seizures persisted, accompanied by numbness and neck movement. Management included physical therapy, hyperbaric oxygen therapy (improving weakness but not tinnitus), and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTraumatic Brain Injury Research · Traumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular Disturbances · Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy and Associated Phenomena
