Flying after concussion

  • I have recently suffered a minor concussion during a traffic accidents. I have a flight scheduled 5 days after my concussion. My parents, as formber surgeons, are claiming that flying after concussion is bad for you. Is this true and why (or why not).


  • Hello Selectosa, It appears you have asked a virtually unanswerable question! ?Question: I am a brain injury survivor who occasionally travels by plane and noticed that traveling this way increases my head pain. I don?t know the cause of this extra discomfort, but I wonder if my head is affected by the air pressure within the plane?s cabin? If [your organization] has published articles in the past about this topic, would you please send me a copy. If you haven?t any previously published information, would you consider it for a future article? I would like to know what is happening when I fly and if anything can be done to prevent this from happening. ?Answer: You bring up an interesting point that has not been written about, to the best of my knowledge, in the context of post traumatic headache pain. In the context of someone with post traumatic headache, an individual with "decreased physiologic stress tolerance" may find any physiologic stress, including high altitudes, particularly in sub-optimally pressurized planes, physiologically taxing. It may come as a surprise to readers, but commercial planes typically are only pressurized to an equivalent of 6,000 to 8,000 feet. I have also seen patients with post-traumatic epilepsy who have developed headaches that were epilepsy related and/or actual seizures when flying at high altitude, particularly in what may have been sub-optimally pressurized planes. There is very little specific information on this topic and it certainly warrants further research. Thanks for your inquiry.? Nathan D. Zasler, MD, FAAPM&R, FAADEP, CIME Medical Director, Concussion Care Center of Virginia CEO & Medical Director, Tree of Life http://www.biausa.org/Pages/askthedoctor.html#cabin The Merck Manual, ?Problems in Transit? page lists various health problems and flying, but concussion is not listed. http://www.merck.com/mmhe/sec25/ch303/ch303c.html I see nothing contraindicating travel by plane in people who have had concussions to fly in this article from American Family Physician: ?Commercial jet aircraft maintain a relative cabin altitude between 5,000 and 8,000 feet during routine flight, with the FARs specifying that an 8,000-foot environment be maintained even at the highest operating altitude. At this relative altitude, the barometric pressure (Pb) decreases from a normal sea level value of 760 mm Hg to around 560 mm Hg, causing the normal baseline arterial partial pressure of oxygen (Pao2) of 98 mm Hg at sea level to decrease to around 60 to 70 mm Hg in normal individuals.6 This corresponds to approximately a 90 percent oxygen saturation (Sao2) on the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve, a point below which there is a steep gradient of the pressure/saturation relationship. Using 50 to 55 mm Hg as a minimum acceptable Pao2 level for a healthy person,7 passengers with cardiovascular, circulatory or pulmonary compromise associated with a reduced Pao2 before flight could easily experience symptoms related to hypoxemia at normal cabin altitudes. An arterial blood gas determination is therefore recommended before travel for passengers with any symptomatic lung disorders.? ?Increasingly, patients are traveling specifically to have an outpatient procedure performed with the intent of traveling home as soon as possible. It should be remembered that although airlines are obligated by the Air Carrier Access Act1 to allow boarding of passengers unless there is a chance that extraordinary medical assistance in-flight may be required, travel should be delayed as long as possible to decrease the chance of complications.? http://www.aafp.org/afp/990901ap/801.html Anecdotal: ?I had suffered a double brain concussion, and my brain swelled so badly the doctors thought they would have to drill holes in my skull to relieve the blood pressure. Fortunately, they didn't have to do that because the swelling went down.? ?The things listed on my profile that I couldn't do made me feel like there was little that I could do! No driving for a year, no climbing on top of aircraft, no going inside an aircraft unless the ramp was down and I could walk up it. I couldn't stand for more than 10 minutes, walk more than a mile, run, do physical training, and - for the fear of black-outs - go anywhere alone. My flying and crewing days were over for the next couple of years.? https://safety.army.mil/warrior_stories/spotlight_story.asp?lessonid=2004922-4 ?Typically, commercial airplanes fly at an altitude of about 38,000 feet. The cabin is pressurized to make it safe and comfortable at that extreme altitude ? but this does not make breathing in an airplane the same as breathing on the ground. Most people are not surprised that the humidity and air pressure of airplane air decreases as the plane ascends. But that?s not all that changes. At sea level, the air we breathe contains about 21 percent oxygen; on a typical commercial flight, the cabin air has only about 15 percent oxygen.? ?Anyone who has been hospitalized within the last 6 weeks with respiratory problems should not fly without a pre-flight evaluation. For children with specific conditions such as cystic fibrosis, sickle cell anemia, or Down syndrome, it?s important to at least talk with your doctor about the risks of flying.? This is about children, but the same applies to adults. http://www.drgreene.com/21_1853.html This site does not contain the answer to your question, but is full of information for people who have had concussions: http://www.medic8.com/healthguide/articles/mildheadinjury.html Your best bet is to visit your doctor, who will know what concussion grade you suffered, as well as your medical history. S/he is the right person to advise you on the safety of flying. Perhaps the following advice, to athletes who have suffered a concussion says it best: ?After a concussion, always get your doctor's OK before returning to a sport. Wait until all of your neurological symptoms have completely gone away.? http://www.cnn.com/HEALTH/library/DS/00320.html If any part of this answer is unclear, please request an Answer Clarification, before rating. I will be happy to assist you further, on this question. Sincerely, Crabcakes Search Terms ============= Cabin pressure + brain injury flying + plane + after brain injury + pressurized cabin flight + post concussion altitude + brain injury







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