Some of the labels commonly used to describe brain-injured children are:
Aphasia | Hyperactive |
Ataxia | |
Athetoid | Mentally Deficient |
Reading Problems | |
Retarded | |
Spastic | |
Dyslexic | |
Educable | Trainable |
Emotionally Disturbed | Untrainable |
Common symptoms of brain injury are:
Auditory Hypersensitivity | Inability to understand words |
Blindness | Inability to walk |
Inability to write | |
Deafness | Inappropriate behavior |
Feeding problems | |
Hearing problems | Poor attention span |
Hyperactivity | Respiratory problems |
Inability to crawl | Runs poorly |
Inability to creep | |
Inability to make sounds | Sensory problems |
Inability to move | Sleeping problems |
Inability to read | Strabismus |
Inability to read at grade level | Tactile problems |
Inability to run | Talks poorly |
Inability to sit up | Temper trantrums |
Inability to speak | Visual problems |
Inability to stand | Walks poorly |
Inability to understand equal to peers | Writes poorly |
Functional Diagnosis
It is necessary to determine which area of the brain is hurt, to what degree the area is injured and to what extent. After a careful neurological evaluation a child may be diagnosed as having a "severe (degree), diffuse (extent), bilateral (both hemispheres of the brain), cortical (area) injury". The old-fashioned symptomatic labels used to describe such a child might be "mentally retarded", "epileptic", "spastic", "hyperactive", "emotionally disturbed", or others.
These old-fashioned labels are not found in the literature of The Institutes but rather the term "brain-injured". This refers to the entire spectrum of brain injury from profound coma to mild learning problems and every kind and degree of brain injury in between.