functional recovery of the brain

    Cards (8)

    • what is functional recovery?
      The process of regaining abilities or skills that were lost or impaired due to injury or illness but in another part of the brain.
    • how does functional recovery work?
      the brain is able to rewire and reorganise itself by forming new synaptic connections close to the area of the damage
    • what are the three ways of functional recovery?
      -axonal sprouting
      -neuronal unmasking
      -recruitment of homologous areas on the opposite side of the brain to perform specific tasks
    • what is axonal sprouting?
      the growth of new nerve endings which connect with other undamaged nerve cells to form new neuronal pathways
    • what is neuronal unmasking?
      this is when synaptic connections already exist anatomically but their function is blocked. in time this gives way to the development of new structures
    • what is recruitment of homologous (similar) areas?
      Recruitment of homologous areas is the process by which corresponding brain regions in the opposite hemisphere would activate during a task or activity when the original side is impaired.
    • evidence for recovery from trauma (functional recovery)
      age differences in recovery: it is much greater in childhood than it is in adulthood. adults are still able to recover but it may take a lot longer or come to a halt after some recovery. Ballantyne et al (2008) found there us more plasticity for recovery after a stroke in infancy or chidhood than in adulthood.
    • evidence for recovery from trauma (functional recovery)
      educational attainment and functional recovery: Schneider (2014) found that patients with the equivalent of a college education are seven times more likely than those who did not finish high school to be disability-free one year after a moderate to severe traumatic brain injury.
      cognitive reserve could be a factor in neural adaptation during recovery from traumatic brain injury