Mobility

Every brain injury is different and will require its own treatment plan and timeline. It’s important the person with a brain injury works with medical professionals, including physiotherapists and occupational therapists to address mobility issues and create a rehabilitation plan. This plan may include your involvement as a caregiver.

Topics in this section include:


In some cases, a brain injury will have physical effects on a person with a brain injury. These effects include:

  • Ataxia (jerkiness) and coordination
  • Balance problems
  • Chronic (consistent) pain
  • Fatigue, difficulties with sleeping, and insomnia
  • Headaches
  • Impaired motor control and motor planning
  • Muscle tone
    • Spasticity (increased tone, tightly flexed)
    • Flaccid (reduced tone, limp)
  • Paralysis or weakness
  • Perception and receiving sensory information (for example, phantom pain) and figuring out how to act on it
  • Sensory problems
    • Dizziness
    • Vision (double vision, loss of vision) may cause significant mobility/balance issues Trouble with hand-eye coordination
    • Hearing loss, tinnitus, equilibrium, ringing in the ears
    • Taste
    • Touch and sense of position of the limbs
    • Smell
    • Sensations on the skin like tingling, pain, or itching

Many of these physical effects impact a person’s mobility, or the ability to move. Examples of this include, but are not limited to:

  • Being unable to walk (limps, poor posture, poor endurance, not able to walk and complete activities at the same time, poor balance, needing to use a walking aid like a cane or rollator).
  • Being unable to work, play or drive
  • Being unable to sit or get dressed
  • Pressure sores from staying in the same position for too long
  • Contractures (permanently stiff joints and/or tight muscles)
  • Loss of muscle mass from disuse
  • Experiencing impaired movement control
  • Increased dependency on others
  • Increased risk of falls
  • Poor bed and wheelchair positioning

When a person experiences changes in their mobility after a brain injury, it can be difficult to adjust to their new reality. This can lead to increased risks of mental health challenges, such as anxiety and depression.

How the brain controls mobility

Our brain controls our ability to move, our physical responses and our ability to use and move objects.  While the location and size of the brain injury doesn’t always mean there will be mobility challenges, certain areas of the brain do control specific aspects of mobility, such as:

  • Basic body functions such as heart rate, blood pressure, respiration, sweating, consciousness, and alertness
  • Coordination and balance, including smoothness of movement
  • Information related to sight, touch, and spatial awareness. If the brain is having trouble determining where and what things are, it can make it difficult to perform movements like reaching for and picking up objects and moving in the environment
  • Planning movements and putting them in order, and strength and coordination of muscles. This means that a person may be able to walk but have difficulty planning their movements or may move impulsively
  • The vestibular system. Everyone has a vestibular system which is made up of organs in the inner ear and the vestibular nerve. The vestibular system provides the brain with information about motion, head position, and where you are in a space. It also helps with balance by stabilizing the head and body during movement and maintaining good posture
  • Vision. Movements can become more difficult if there are visual deficits that make it more difficult to see

In some cases, individuals experience visible effects after their brain injury. For example, stroke survivors often experience increase in muscle tone, meaning parts of their body are tightly flexed. Many people with traumatic brain injury may have additional temporary injuries like broken bones which will impact mobility.

In many cases, physical deficits of brain injury are ‘invisible’ to others most of the time (such as balance issues or hand-eye coordination). It is also more common for people with a brain injury to experience cognitive and behavioural changes. These are only noticed by people who know the person. This is why brain injury is often referred to as an ‘invisible’ injury.

Common mobility issues after brain injury

How to assist a survivor with mobility issues

If you are providing mobility assistance to a brain injury survivor, it’s important that you are trained to do so safely. Helping someone with mobility can involve transferring them from a bed to a chair, helping them use the facilities, and walking. Caregivers need to know how to safely lift, position, and move the person to reduce the risk of injury for both of you.

The best way to get this training is to work with doctors and therapists to learn safe procedures for lifting, moving and positioning. This is particularly important if they are unable to assist you during these processes.

Lifting

Lifting a person is a common caregiver duty that presents a unique challenge for people who are not used to it. It is difficult to do, and it’s something that must be done properly and safely to prevent injury.

Proper lifting should be practiced a few times before you attempt to do it unsupervised to minimize the risk of injury to yourself and the person you’re lifting. Caregivers who are lifting – especially on a daily basis – are at risk of injuring their back, neck and/or shoulders. In order to protect your body, you should take care of yourself through:

  • Exercise
  • Proper posture
  • Asking someone (for example, another caregiver) to assist you
  • Having the environment properly set up
  • Using proper lifting and moving tools like boards and chairs
  • Motivating the person with a brain injury to help with moving (if they are able)

Remember: if you are lifting someone out of a wheeled device, make sure the device brakes are engaged.

If the person requires special tools or moving techniques, work with doctors and therapists to learn and practice how to move them safely.

Physical rehabilitation

When a brain injury causes damage that affects mobility and movement, a physiotherapist or kinesiologist – or in the case of fine motor skills, an occupational therapist – will assess the person’s physical status and abilities. After the assessment, a treatment program is created that fits the person’s needs. The rehabilitation program is tailored to the survivor and requires ongoing re-assessment and modification to make sure that it is optimized for positive progress. Rehabilitation may consist of activities such as:

  • Strengthening exercises focused on building endurance and muscle
  • Range of motion (ROM) stretches focusing on specific joints
  • Balance exercises which will target areas of deficit
  • Gait training to improve posture and walking
  • Dizziness/vestibular retraining
  • Visual/perception re-training

Physical therapy can be short or long term and requires active participation. The survivor may also be given activities or exercises to do at home between appointments under the supervision or with the assistance of caregivers. If this is the case, you will be shown how to help the person with these activities, including knowing when the exercise is being performed correctly.

Resources/studies

Factors That Influence Functional Mobility Outcomes of Patients After Traumatic Brain Injury

Can robot-assisted movement training (Lokomat) improve functional recovery and psychological well-being in chronic stroke? Promising findings from a case study


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