Beyond symptomatic diagnosis of mild traumatic brain injury

Concussion. 2023 May 22;8(2):CNC109. doi: 10.2217/cnc-2023-0005. eCollection 2023 Jun.

Abstract

It is commonly assumed that there is no brain injury if there are no noticeable symptoms following a head impact. There is growing evidence that traumatic brain injuries can occur with no outward symptoms and that the damage from these injuries can accumulate over time resulting in disease and impairment later in life. It is time to rethink the role that symptoms play in traumatic brain injury and adopt a quantitative understanding of brain health at the cellular level to improve the way we diagnose, prevent, and ultimately heal brain injury.

Keywords: asymptomatic; concussion; diagnosis; mild TBI; sub-concussive; symptoms; treatment.

Plain language summary

It is commonly assumed that there is no brain injury if there are no noticeable symptoms following a head impact. There is growing evidence that traumatic brain injuries can occur with no outward symptoms and that the damage from these injuries can accumulate over time resulting in disease and impairment later in life. It is time to rethink the role that symptoms play in traumatic brain injury and adopt a quantitative understanding of brain health at the cellular level to improve the way we diagnose, prevent, and ultimately heal brain injury.

Publication types

  • Editorial