Concussion and TBI After a Car Accident
You don't have to hit your head to get a concussion. The same forces that cause whiplash — your head snapping forward and back during a collision — can cause your brain to move inside your skull. That movement can produce a traumatic brain injury that doesn't show up on a CT scan and won't be caught in a standard ER visit.
What Is a Concussion?
A concussion is a mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) caused by rapid acceleration and deceleration of the brain within the skull. During a car accident, even if your head doesn't strike anything, the sudden change in velocity can shift your brain, stretch neural connections, and trigger a cascade of chemical changes that affect how your brain functions.
The word "mild" in the medical classification is misleading. A concussion can produce symptoms that significantly affect your daily life: difficulty concentrating, memory problems, mood changes, sleep disruption, and persistent headaches that last weeks or months without proper management.
Concussion and whiplash frequently occur together after motor vehicle trauma. The same mechanism that hyperextends your cervical spine also accelerates your brain inside your skull. Treating one without recognizing the other leads to incomplete recovery, which is why evaluation by a managing physician who assesses the full injury pattern matters.
Why Concussions Get Missed
Concussions are invisible injuries. A CT scan at the ER looks for bleeding and fractures. It detects structural damage; most concussions involve functional disruption, not structural damage. The CT comes back clean, and you're told you're fine.
But you're not fine. You're having trouble remembering conversations. You can't focus at work. Light and sound bother you. You're more irritable than usual. You're exhausted but can't sleep well.
These symptoms are real. They have a neurological cause. And they respond to treatment when the concussion is actually identified and managed with the same systematic approach that evidence supports for all motor vehicle injuries: early intervention, active treatment, and coordinated multidisciplinary care (ASA Task Force 2010; Imam 2021; Bandong 2018).
Symptoms to Watch For
Concussion symptoms fall into four categories and can appear immediately or develop over days:
Physical symptoms:
- Headache or pressure in the head
- Dizziness or balance problems
- Nausea
- Sensitivity to light and noise
- Fatigue that doesn't improve with rest
- Blurred or double vision
Cognitive symptoms:
- Difficulty concentrating or thinking clearly
- Feeling mentally "foggy"
- Slower processing speed
- Memory problems: forgetting conversations, losing your place in tasks
Emotional symptoms:
- Irritability or mood swings
- Anxiety, particularly about driving
- Sadness or emotional flatness
- Feeling "not right" without being able to explain why
Sleep symptoms:
- Sleeping more or less than usual
- Difficulty falling or staying asleep
- Feeling unrested despite sleeping
If you're experiencing three or more of these symptoms after a car accident, especially in combination with neck pain, you likely have a concussion that needs evaluation beyond what the ER provided.
Why a Managing Physician Matters for Concussion
Concussion recovery isn't "rest and wait." Current clinical evidence supports active, guided recovery as producing better outcomes than passive rest alone, consistent with the broader principle that early intervention and functional restoration outperform a "wait and see" approach for motor vehicle injuries (Imam 2021; Wand 2004; Swedish Whiplash Task Force 2008).
Your managing physician evaluates the concussion alongside your other injuries. This coordination matters because the overlap between concussion symptoms and cervical injury symptoms is significant: headaches, dizziness, difficulty concentrating, and fatigue can stem from either or both. Distinguishing cervicogenic symptoms from neurological ones requires clinical expertise and guides treatment in different directions.
Your physician coordinates the specialists who address different aspects of the injury:
- Neuropsychological testing identifies specific cognitive deficits and provides objective baseline measurements for tracking recovery
- Vestibular rehabilitation addresses dizziness and balance problems through guided exercises
- Vision therapy targets visual processing disruptions that interfere with reading, screen use, and driving
- Behavioral health support helps with emotional symptoms, anxiety, and PTSD that commonly accompany traumatic brain injury
- Cervicogenic symptom management distinguishes and treats headaches caused by neck injury from those caused by brain injury
CCC coordinates TBI specialist referrals through Cortex TBI for neuropsychological evaluation, cognitive rehabilitation, and vestibular therapy.
This individualized, multi-modal approach reflects the same evidence-based principle that applies across all motor vehicle injuries: combining treatment options produces better results than any single modality alone (NASS 2020; Australian Government 2008; ASA Task Force 2010).
What Evaluation and Treatment Looks Like
Initial Evaluation
Your managing physician conducts a comprehensive neurological exam, assesses cognitive function with validated screening tools, and reviews your full symptom pattern: physical, cognitive, emotional, and sleep. This evaluation goes well beyond standard ER screening and establishes the baseline for tracking your recovery.
Coordinated Treatment Plan
Based on your specific symptoms, your physician builds a team. Physical therapy for vestibular and musculoskeletal rehabilitation. Massage therapy for cervical muscle tension contributing to headaches. Behavioral health for emotional and cognitive symptoms. Ongoing medical management for the cervical injuries that accompany the concussion. Every referral, every order, every progress assessment is documented through CCC's Care Coordination Form; your managing physician sees the full picture at every visit.
Active Recovery Guidance
Your physician provides structured return-to-activity progression: work, driving, exercise, screen time. Pushing too hard too fast can set recovery back. Having a physician managing the pace protects your healing.
Progress Monitoring
Cognitive testing at intervals measures whether you're recovering on schedule. Clinical evaluation tracks physical symptom resolution. If recovery plateaus, your physician escalates: additional specialist referral, adjusted treatment intensity, or advanced diagnostic workup.
Concussion red flags
Seek emergency care immediately if you experience: worsening headache that doesn't respond to medication, repeated vomiting, seizures, slurred speech, weakness on one side of your body, or loss of consciousness. These may indicate a more serious brain injury requiring urgent intervention.
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the signs of a concussion after a car accident?
Can you have a concussion without hitting your head?
Why didn't the ER diagnose my concussion?
How long does concussion recovery take?
Should I see a neurologist for a concussion after a car accident?
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