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Brain Injury Glossary
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z #
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Paralysis: Neurologic muscular weakness or dysfunction
to the point of immobility. With lack of movement, muscles begin to contract
and become smaller or atrophic. Paralysis of the extremities on one side of
the body is called hemiplegia and paralysis of all four extremities is
called quadriplegia.
Parietal: Complex lobe of the cerebrum; serves many functions; puts
together verbal/visual information to make reading possible and plays a role
in tactile sensation.
Penetrating Injuries: Injuries which occur when the skull becomes
broken and an object such as a skull fragment or bullet penetrates the dura
mater and brain tissue.
Penetrating Skull Fracture: A brain injury in which an object pierces
the skull and injures brain tissue.
Persistent Vegetative State: An ongoing state of severely impaired
consciousness, in which the patient is incapable of voluntary motion.
PIA: One of the three membranes holding the brain together.
Plasticity: Ability of the brain to adapt to deficits and injury.
Pons: The part of the hindbrain that acts as the information link
between the forebrain and cerebellum.
Post Traumatic Epilepsy: A type of seizure disorder occurring in
greater than 5 percent of patients who suffer head trauma. The more severe
the injury, the greater the likelihood that seizures will appear. Seizures
may consist of motor or sensory activity, emotional states or a combination.
Post Concussion Syndrome: A group of symptoms occurring after mild
head injury that may persist for days, weeks or months.
Post- Traumatic Amnesia: The period after being unconscious when
there may be confused behavior and no continuous memory of day to day
events.
Post-Traumatic Dementia: A condition marked by mental deterioration
and emotional apathy following trauma.
Post-Traumatic Epilepsy: Recurrent seizures occurring more than 1
week after a traumatic brain injury.
Procedural: The ability to learn rule-based or automatic behavioral
sequences, such as motor skills, conditioned responses, certain kinds of
rule-based puzzles and perceptual motor tasks, and to carry out sequences
for running/operating things.
Proprioception: The sensory awareness of the position of body parts
with or without movement.
Prosodic Dysfunction: Problems with speech intonation or inflection.
Prosody: Stress, intonation, intensity and duration of voice that
signals linguistic qualities; melody of speech caused by modifications of
pitch, quality, strength and duration affecting mainly stress and
intenational patterns.