Tucson Social Security Disability Blog

How The Brain Handles The Loss Of Use Of A Limb

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I have represented many people who have lost the use of an arm or a leg due illness or injury. Whether someone can qualify for Social Security disability based on the inability to control one or more of their extremities is fact-specific.  A loss of full use of the dominant arm, for example, probably affects a claimant’s ability to work more than if it were a leg. Of course, they are many factors at play.

A New Study Shows An Extraordinary Ability Of The Brain

That said, a fascinating new study looks at how the brain reacts to the sudden loss of feeling and control in an arm or a leg.  According to NPR, a healthy neurologist named Dr. Dosenbach voluntarily incapacitated his right arm by putting in into a cast. Two of his colleagues at Washington University in St. Louis did the same with their arms.

Once the arms were no longer in use, Dr. Dosenbach did brain scans. These tests revealed that within 48 hours of his arm being immobilized, his brain essentially turned that limb off. The brain basically disconnected the otherwise functional and healthy arm from the rest of the body. This did not mean that Dr. Dosebach’s arm withered. Rather, his brain sent signals to that arm that kept all the circuits intact and ready to fire back up as soon as Dr. Dosebach’s arm was back in motion.

Consider A Donation

Important Implications For Stroke Survivors And Others

Are You Being Typecasted?

This might seem obvious to anyone who ever had an arm or leg in a cast. Still, it is an important finding that suggests that the brain has the capacity to rewire itself. The brain also appears to be ready to go as soon as the affected limb is back online.  Consider the implications for those poor souls who have had a stroke or other brain injury that left an extremity unresponsive.  If doctors figure out how to repair the brain damage, it seems like the arms and legs will report for duty again.

Arm?

One therapy in play, as a result, is so-called Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy (CIMT). The idea here is familiar to anyone who had a lazy eye as a child. Doctors patch the good eye and make the lazy one work hard to catch up. Doctors have been hesitant to put a good arm into a sling, though, to encourage a weaker arm to strengthen. Doctors feared that the result could be two weak arms. Dr. Dosenbach’s research suggests that fear may be misplaced.

Take Heart

If you have a withered arm or leg for whatever reason, take heart. It sounds like that limb is raring to go and one day soon might just do that. Even if all your limbs are fine, it might make sense to start using your non-dominant hand more often. This could strengthen the connections in the brain and make that arm more useful to you in your daily life.

Endlessly Fascinating

The human brain is endlessly fascinating. It really seems like there is little it cannot do.

If you have suffered the loss of the use of a limb and would like to explore Social Security disability, let me know.

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Hearing scheduled? Call Today.

If Social Security has scheduled your disability case to be heard by one of their judges, call me immediately. Unlike many large law firms, I can move quickly to get your case ready to be won.

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About The Author

Since 1992, I have been helping the people of Southern Arizona get the benefits they are due. Before devoting all my efforts to assisting people with Social Security disability claims, I also handled such complex lawsuits as medical malpractice and products liability. I brought to my Social Security cases all the skills and attention to detail that I developed in the courtroom. I approach each Social Security disability case as if it were a million-dollar lawsuit. For the people trying to get Social Security benefits, their claim is every bit as important. Because I have personally handled so many Social Security cases, I have refined the skills I need to win your case for you. I have helped people win cases for every kind of ailment from arthritis to valley fever. At present, I am focused on helping those persons with neurological and orthopedic disorders. Because claims for people over age fifty bring additional complications, I particularly seek out those cases to work on. I regularly write about back and spine conditions on my blog. I actively seek out the latest information about orthopedic and neurological disorders to ensure I can represent my clients as effectively as possible. Because of my current focus, I regret that I am not able to take any cases for mental disorders. If you are over age fifty and suffer from any orthopedic or neurological disorder, please contact me at once.