April 26, 2010

Illinois Researcher’s Brain Implant Creates Hope for People Suffering From Brain Trauma

Reuters reports that a University of Illinois researcher has helped create a new brain implant made of silk and tiny electrodes and helped conduct studies assessing its effectiveness. Because the silk is biodegradable and water-soluble, it dissolves on the brain, leaving the electrodes in place and allowing the device to record brain signals more accurately than other brain implants and minimize damage to the brain. The silk brain implant also could have application to people suffering from serious brain traumaor a neurological disorder such as epilepsy or a spinal cord injury.

The Chicago brain injury lawyersat Levin & Perconti think these new findings are of particular interest to clients who have suffered spinal cord injuries as a result of the negligence of others. These injuries can occur from motor vehicle accidents, slip and fall incidents, and workplace accidents, or because of mistakes by health care providers, such as by failure to relieve spinal cord compression. As The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke explains, spinal cord injuries often begin with sudden, serious blows to the spine that fracture or dislocate vertebrae. This can compress the spine. Spinal cord injuries destroy the nerve cell extensions that carry signals between the brain and body, and when a person suffers a severe spinal cord injury, they can become completely paralyzed. However, people that suffer from less severe spinal cord injuries still retain some ability to convey messages from their brain to their body.

The silk brain implant can help both categories of people affected by a spinal cord injury. As Reuters reports, the silk brain implant has the potential to reroute signals from the brain to prosthetic devices, enabling people with spinal cord injuries to move independently once again.

April 23, 2010

Chicago Woman Receives $3 Million Settlement for Traumatic Brain Injury

The Chicago City Council approved a $3 million settlement on behalf of a woman seriously injured when the car she was riding in was hit by a stolen vehicle during an unauthorized police chase, the Chicago Sun-Times reports. The stolen vehicle was driven in excess of more than twice the speed limit when it slammed into the woman’s vehicle, and the collision was so strong that her body was thrown from the car and landed on the ground forty feet away. Doctors had to place the Chicago woman in an induced coma for two days and she was in the hospital for over two weeks. The woman suffered permanent brain damage as a result of the crash.

Mayo Clinic reports that half of all traumatic brain injuries occur as a result of car, motorcycle and bicycle collisions. When the head is struck too strongly, such as can occur in a collision, the brain can slam against the inside of the skull and cause bruising of the brain, bleeding, and torn nerve fibers. Sudden braking or stopping as a result of a car collision can also cause this to happen. A traumatic brain injury can be fatal. When serious brain injuries are not fatal, the consequences can still be severe. Traumatic brain injury can cause cognitive impairment, affecting a person’s thinking and reasoning skills, memory, and multitasking ability.

To help prevent against serious brain trauma, always wear a seatbelt while driving in a car. Motor vehicle collisions are sometimes unpreventable, but by taking the extra precaution of wearing something as simple as a seatbelt or child booster seat, lives can be saved and people can take steps toward recovery, whether by medical intervention, lawsuits, or both.

April 6, 2010

Taser Stun Guns Can Lead to Brain Damage

A new lawsuit highlights the dangers of using Taser stun guns. According to aboutlawsuits.com, a California man recently filed suit against Taser International after suffering serious brain damage when police used a Taser stun gun on him. The Taser stun gun, an electric control device, caused abnormal heart rhythms and cardiac arrest. The man was resuscitated, but he suffered brain damage and permanent disabilities as a result of the Taser stun gun. Taser International claims Taser stun guns are safe and do not pose risks for fatal or permanent injury. However, the company issued a warning to police officers telling them to avoid shooting people in the chest because it could result in cardiac arrest. The trial is to begin in August.

The American Heart Association describes how this man’s injury resulted. The organization explains that severe brain damage and permanent death begin to occur just 4 to 6 minutes after someone experiences cardiac arrest. Cardiac arrest can be reversed if treatment occurs quickly. However, the person’s chances of survival decrease 7 to 10 percent for every minute spent without performing CPR or defibrillation. The American Heart Association notes that during the first 10 months after automated external defibrillators were installed in Chicago airports, 64 percent of people suffering a Chicago cardiac arrest incident in the airports were revived with no resulting brain damage.

Similar to the Taser stun gun lawsuit, our Chicago brain injury attorneys have experience representing clients who suffer cardiac arrest as a result of someone else’s negligence. For example, we reached a $1.1 million settlement against a village, its paramedics and a hospital because their failure to timely transport a man to the hospital and provide resuscitative measures resulted in the man suffering cardiac arrest. If you or a family member have suffered cardiac arrest or brain damage and believe someone is at fault, call our Illinois brain injury lawyers because you may be entitled to recovery.