Arab Times

Brain injuries seen in domestic assaults: study

Even a single sudden blow to head can cause traumatic brain injury

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CHICAGO, Aug 23, (AP): There are no bomb blasts or collisions with burly linemen in Susan Contreras’ past. Her headaches, memory loss and bouts of confused thinking were a mystery until doctors suggested a probable cause: domestic violence.

A former partner repeatedly beat her, she says.

“He would hit me mainly in the head so that nobody would see the injuries. He’d hit me in the back of the head so the bruises wouldn’t show,” the Phoenix woman said.

The abuse from her ex-partner took a heavy emotional toll, Contreras says. But even though he sometimes knocked her out, she hadn’t considered that her brain might have been as damaged as her psyche.

“Honestly, there’s so many holes in my memory, thinking problems,” she said. “My memory is really gone”.

Brain trauma in domestic violence survivors has been overshadow­ed by concerns about injuries in Iraq and Afghanista­n war vets, and by effects of repeated head blows in football players. Experts believe many cases go undetected and untreated in abused women, making them vulnerable to problems with thinking, mood and behavior.

Advocates say the injuries leave some survivors so impaired that they can’t manage their jobs and lives. Some even end up homeless.

About one-quarter of US women and 14 percent of men have experience­d severe physical assaults by a partner in their lifetime, including hitting, punching, being slammed against something hard or pushed down stairs, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention . Head and neck injuries are among the most common, and data suggest that domestic assaults may cause traumatic brain injuries in at least 60 percent of survivors, according to a research review published this year in the journal Family & Community Health.

Homeless

Traumatic brain injuries can result from even a single sudden blow to the head. The symptoms may be short-term or long-lasting, and repeated assaults increase chances for permanent neurologic­al damage. Whether that damage can cause the downward spiral that domestic violence survivors sometimes get caught in is unproven, but studies have found these brain injuries are more common in homeless people than in the general population. And there’s no dispute that they can cause life-changing disabiliti­es.

“This population is not unlike that of our athletes,” said Dr Javier Cardenas, director of a brain injury program at Barrow Neurologic­al Institute in Phoenix. He’s a trauma consultant for the National Football League and also treats domestic violence survivors.

Cardenas cited Baltimore Ravens’ running back Ray Rice’s 2014 attack on his thenfiance­e, caught on an elevator video camera. Much of the public discussion about the incident was about whether brain injuries in football players may be linked to violent behavior off the field. It overlooked a far more obvious injury.

“When Janay Rice was knocked out cold in the elevator, attention was all about how Ray Rice had previous concussion­s. Nobody mentioned that the woman in the elevator suffered a brain injury right in front of everybody’s eyes,” Cardenas said.

Traumatic brain injuries include concussion­s and don’t always cause loss of consciousn­ess or damage that can be detected on imaging scans. Symptoms may not occur immediatel­y but can develop over time, making

Susan Contreras sits on her bed in a Phoenix-area shelter for victims of domestic violence. (AP)

it difficult sometimes to link them with previous abuse.

The brain isn’t a hard, fixed organ. It’s more like jello, surrounded by cerebrospi­nal fluid that works like a shock absorber when the head is hit. A violent blow — from colliding with a linebacker’s helmet, from blast pressure after an explosion, or from a partner’s angry fist — can damage brain cells at the point of impact and slam the brain against the skull, sometimes bruising tissue, tearing nerve fibers, or causing bleeding.

Degenerati­ve

Repeated blows have been linked with a degenerati­ve brain disease called chronic traumatic encephalop­athy. CTE first made headlines several years ago when it was found in the brains of retired NFL players who had killed themselves. Research linking domestic violence with suicide is sparse, although several small studies have suggested that suicide attempts are much more common among battered women than among those who have not experience­d partner abuse.

CTE is linked with memory loss, confusion, mood changes including depression and eventually dementia. Some scientists think domestic violence survivors might be at risk.

“I have no doubt that there are many women who have been abused enough that some of them probably have CTE,” said Dr Robert Cantu, a leading expert on football-related brain injuries and co-director of Boston University’s Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalop­athy.

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