Category:

Brain Injuries

Young Stroke Victims

While it is true that the risk of stroke increases with age, strokes in young adults, teenagers, and even children are rising. Currently, 10% to 15% of all strokes occur in people between the ages of 18 and 50. Despite this, Emergency Rooms frequently operate on an “age bias.” When a 70-year-old walks in with slurred speech, the stroke team is activated immediately. When a 25-year-old or a child presents with the exact same symptoms, doctors often look for “more likely” explanations like intoxication, migraines, or vertigo.

Thunderclap Headaches and Brain Aneurysms

It often happens without warning. One moment you are lifting weights, straining during a bowel movement, or simply sitting at work. The next, you are struck by a headache of terrifying intensity. Patients often describe it as being hit in the back of the head with a baseball bat.

Sent Home with a “Migraine”? Signs You Actually Had a Stroke

The scenario is terrifyingly common: You or a loved one experience a sudden, splitting headache. Maybe your vision blurs, or you feel dizzy. You rush to the Emergency Room, terrified something is wrong with your brain. But because you are young—perhaps in your 30s or 40s—or because you have a history of headaches, the doctor is quick to reassure you.

Retinoblastoma

You Googled “white pupil in baby photo” and now you’re terrified. You noticed it first in holiday pictures—one eye glows red like it should, but the other shines white or yellowish, like a cat’s eye. Your pediatrician said it was just the camera. But the white glow keeps appearing. Now you’ve learned the word you never wanted to hear: Retinoblastoma. And you’re wondering—could my doctor have caught this earlier?

Therapeutic Hypothermia for Brain Injuries

Therapeutic hypothermia, also known as targeted temperature management (TTM), is a medical treatment that involves lowering the body’s core temperature to protect the brain and other vital organs after a traumatic or ischemic event. In some cases, the need for therapeutic hypothermia may have resulted from medical negligence. Medical malpractice occurs when healthcare providers fail to provide the standard level of care, leading to preventable harm.

Brain and Spinal Cord Injuries

In medical malpractice cases, permanent injury to the brain and spinal cord are often traced to one or a combination of three causes: compression due to swelling or pressure, lack of oxygen-rich blood to the brain or spinal cord (anoxia), and/or bleeding and hematomas.

Hospital Conceals Airway Accident Resulting in Brain Damage of Child

A young child suffered permanent brain damage following an accident that occurred in a hospital where he was being monitored after being struck by a car. Jerry Meyers represented the child and his family and was able to assist them in navigating economic and other challenges they faced after this tragedy left the child permanently disabled.

What can we help you find?

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors