Living Through Neural Damage

By Fidel Bloodsaw


Managing a traumatic brain injury is difficult. I know, because I suffered one. Finding a way that I could work past my new limitations was extraordinarily difficult. That's why I decided to try a new approach and try Making a Good Brain Great: The Amen Clinic Program for Achieving and Sustaining Optimal Mental Performance. I'd heard a lot about their revolutionary diagnostic techniques, and needed to see what they had to offer.

Getting to know how Dr. Daniel Amen actually diagnoses his patients was really interesting. Mainly because he employs radically different techniques than most other people would attempt. Including the use of the complicated but useful SPECT scan.

To my understanding, the unique scan http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20040210/msgs/312918.html offers takes many different two dimensional pictures of your brain. When they are then all put together, the doctors can get a three dimensional view of how your brain works.

This sort of scan is pretty revolutionary. Mainly because you look at the brain while it's working. The pictures constantly update, and doctors can look at what your brain is doing while you're active in the machine.

Dr. Amen is dedicated to more accurate diagnostic work. Too many hospitals are a little bit complacent. That can lead to long years of treatment, and having to go through unnecessary procedures. That's what I had to deal with, and none of it really helped.

You have to remember that Amen Clinics don't provide an instant cure. They are going to be able to diagnose you better, but healing is still down to the doctors. They are just able to heal more effectively because of the better diagnosis.

I still had to meet regularly with a psychiatrist to see real results. But there really wasn't whole lot of musical chairs with new drugs. Instead, it was more of a focus on what works for my unique problem. Thanks to the scan the doctor knew what was right straight away.

What you have to realize in the end is that treatment is always going to take a lot of time. Even with the best possible doctors, when you have a brain injury like mine, it was always going to be a long road. They just made sure I was taking the right road out, instead of just trying to point me in the right direction.




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