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What Should You Do if You Get a Concussion?
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115,525 Views • May 27, 2024 • Click to toggle off description
Dr. Gary Steinberg and Dr. Andrew Huberman discuss the general safety and resilience of the brain against everyday minor head impacts.

Dr. Gary Steinberg is a neurosurgeon and a professor of neurosciences, neurosurgery, and neurology at Stanford University School of Medicine. Dr. Andrew Huberman is a tenured professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford University School of Medicine and host of the Huberman Lab podcast.

Disclaimer: www.hubermanlab.com/disclaimer
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Views : 115,525
Genre: Science & Technology
Date of upload: May 27, 2024 ^^


Rating : 4.858 (130/3,532 LTDR)

96.45% of the users lieked the video!!
3.55% of the users dislieked the video!!
User score: 94.67- Overwhelmingly Positive

RYD date created : 2024-07-11T21:01:39.511324Z
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YouTube Comments - 98 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@cgc1581

1 month ago

I suffered a concussion 13 months ago. I’m still not 100%. I graduated 2015 summa cum laude and now have such a hard time with several different tasks that I previously took for granted. Scariest thing of my life to be fully aware of how off I was, but not be able to do a damn thing about it. I’d say I’m about 90-95% now, but it’s no joke. I wish someone would’ve told me to see a concussion specialist. I didn’t even know there was such a thing until recently. Urgent care and the ER were useless.

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@dr.badass702

1 month ago

I'm going to start refering to my head as my "cranial vault" from now on: "I've got a bit of a cranial vault ache today" "Man, that's a real cranial vault-scratcher"

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@GFD_VIDEOS

1 month ago

Concussions, colloquially referred to as mild traumatic brain injuries, manifest as transient neurophysiological dysfunction consequent to abrupt biomechanical forces imparted upon the cranium or body, potentially yielding a plethora of symptoms ranging from cephalalgia to cognitive impairment.

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@Yentl-gx2cm

1 month ago

And this ignorance will help to neglect the concussion. I’m not saying you have to worry about every hit to the head. But bc of this advice I neglect my physical boundaries. And 4 years later still have concussion symptoms. So people please be careful if you have a concussion, take your time and take your rest and please be careful to not get another one. Bc it’s easy to hit your head for the second time.

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@Dash4CashNJ

1 month ago

my best advice after getting a concussion; don't get another one

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@AbbeyNeuropsychologyClinic

1 month ago

Today we live in a world where you don’t have to guess or “worry”, but rather get evaluated by a specialist. A neuropsychologist who specializes in brain mapping with qEEG can look at the functional effects from a neuropsychological perspective as well as the brain activity. There is no need to sit and wait it out and worry or just hope it gets better on its own. Get an assessment and healing opportunities is the best way to prevent acute and long term effects and lower the risk or learning disabilities, attention problems, mood dysregulation, and later things like dementia. I’m actually surprised that this perspective is being endorsed here.

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@smokeyb7120

1 month ago

I got a concussion in high school when the rugby team I was a part of was used as tackle bags for the higher grade of rugby players. I wasn't able to protect my fall and my head slammed the ground and I was out for a few seconds. When I got up I couldn't see anything for several minutes. That could explain my sub par eyesight now. I never told anyone about the concussion at the time. I kept playing after my eyesight came back after regrouping for a while, after that particular exercise. 😅

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@anne-marieh6128

1 month ago

Great info. I had a hard core hit to the head- and not realizing til a long time later that is probably what caused me to oversleep and confuse my work schedule- and ultimately cost me a really great job.

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@Craig_Walker_

1 month ago

As a Doctor Who saw many relatively mild head strikes and whiplashes over the years, I could not disagree more with the information posted here. It has little to do with the brain and everything to do with the brainstem. Long term pathology as a direct consequence of whiplash, especially mild whiplash, is continually overlooked. Not only the neck, but all the organs served by the complex neurology in the brainstem. That means every organ you have.

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@GK-qc5ry

1 month ago

Felt alot better hearing this. At 9 I slipped on a marble floor and knocked myself out. Didn't know where I was. Slept on it and got better with a headache the next day but thought I might have permanent brain damage.

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@ishansaha24

1 month ago

Used to box, competed twice in amateurs in 17 years of age, lost both and still continued to train later switching to mma with lots of hard sparring. Been 8 years since then. Also had a habit to hit myself in the head out of pulse and anger especially behind the head. Now at 25 I head severe migraines on the temple and dizziness just by talking loudly.

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@SEBZ11

1 month ago

Andrew looks like the average man from the stone age

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@WestTexasSunshine

1 month ago

As someone with a MASSIVE skull fracture, it confirmed, I do in fact have a hard head.

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@bhaskarasneo

1 month ago

Any discussion on soccer headers ? if they are dangerous in long term. PS : just wrote soccer to avoid confusion, football is what I call

1 |

@drmarkheisig

1 month ago

Oof. Huge miss. First, there's no such thing as a "mild concussion." You have one or you don't... Again.. oof.

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@JKnSK

1 month ago

I have post concussive syndrome, 4 years, completely debilitating. An mTBI can be life altering. And mine was caused by sickness not a traumatic hit to the brain. There needs to be more understanding in the medical world about how to help people like me.

1 |

@kellmos571

1 month ago

I’m confused. Are they saying don’t worry if symptoms resolve in a few days and don’t get it checked out? If I smack my head I am getting that thing scanned. Too many concerns for brain bleeds. I actually had a concussion which left me blacked out, my friend took me to the ER and I was ok but it took about three weeks for pain to subside.

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@ryanbell6537

1 month ago

What about concussions from injuries that were also accompanied by skull fractures which have lingering symptoms for almost a year including anthropomorphism and memory loss? .......... asking for a friend.....

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@taylorrachael2238

1 month ago

I’m literally at home right now with a mild-moderate concussion!

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@brotherjongrey9375

1 month ago

Lots of small head hits seem to be the thing that brings CTE... Boxers and guys who shoot artillery/tank

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