Although brain injury symptoms may subside
enough for you to return to daily life, trauma to the brain can continue to
subtly wreak havoc on how your body functions and feels for month and even
years later. For instance, many people notice their hormone function isn’t the
same after a brain injury.
Your hormonal command center — the hypothalamus
and pituitary gland — is in the brain. Although a head injury may occur in an
isolated area, the vast networks of communication across the entire brain mean
that damage to one area affects the entire brain. And because the brain runs
the body, it only makes sense daily operations of the body take a hit too.
Estimates on how many people suffer from hormone
disorders caused by brain injury vary, however, one study
of 1,000 patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) found almost 30 percent had
compromised pituitary function.
The hormonal systems most impacted are the sex
hormones, growth hormones (which adults need for bone and muscle strength), and
adrenal, or stress, hormones. Symptoms range from mild to severe and can
surface immediately or months or even years later.
Common hormone symptoms related to brain injury
include fatigue, weight gain, low blood pressure, low libido, loss of muscle
mass, and amenorrhea. Children may have growth problems later.
More severe repercussions can include Addison’s
disease (adrenal insufficiency), diabetes insipidus (which causes intense
thirst and heavy urination), or hyponatremia (abnormally low sodium).
How
functional neurology and functional medicine can help restore hormone function
Why will two people with the same TBI have two
wildly different responses hormonally? In functional neurology and functional
medicine, we know one reason is the health of the brain prior to injury. For
instance, one person eats a healthy diet, avoids inflammatory foods, isn’t
already struggling with depression or anxiety, does not have advanced brain inflammation, and exercises
regularly. This person may experience a good and swift recovery after a TBI.
However, take the the person who lives on a
pizza and mac-and-cheese, unaware that a gluten and dairy
sensitivity are causing immune attacks on the brain. They also drink soda every
day, sit gaming or working for hours instead of getting any exercise, and work
or live in a stressful, toxic environment. This person likely already has
hormonal imbalances and a highly inflamed brain. A brain injury is going to be
much more devastating as a result.
Also, hormonal status in midlife can play a big
role in how the brain responds to injury as the sex hormones are highly protective of the
brain. For the woman or man who experiences a steep decline in hormone
production in midlife, their brain is much more vulnerable to damage and slower
recovery after a TBI.
You may think hormone replacement therapy is the
answer, and in some people it may be, but in functional neurology we look at
the various dietary and lifestyle conditions that create hormonal imbalances
and work to address those.
We customize rehabilitative functional neurology
strategies based on the type of damage a patient’s brain received and
pre-existing metabolic health.
We also examine and address the function of related
systems, such as the vestibular system, or inner ear; the vagus nerve, an
information highway that connects the brain to the organs; and the visual
system.Working with these systems, which are so integral to brain function, is
a vital to rehabilitation.
If your hormones have been out of whack since
your concussion, or brain injury, ask my office how we can help.
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