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Mom's concussion leads writer to research in neuroscience

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Meehan Crist tells the story of her mom at a storytelling event in New York City. (Photo courtesy of The Greene Space.)

When Meehan Crist was younger, her mother had a concussion. It changed her mother's life, so much so that sometimes she'd walk into a room and not remember where she was. When Crist found out what happened, it sent her on a journey of trying to understand more about the brain.


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Memory is one the oldest subjects in literature, and one of the hottest topics in current neuroscience.

Meehan Crist, the writer in residence in biological sciences at Columbia University, has been working on a book about traumatic brain injury. Her obsession with the topic started close to home, when her mother suffered a concussion and began forgetting things.

All kinds of things. Where she was driving. How to read.

When she crossed the threshold from one room to another, she would forget where she was and had to sit down to try to recall. Her handwriting changed and the bank called to ask if someone was forging her checks.

But Crist didn’t know this as a child; her mother hid what was going on, and Crist was an adult before she broke family taboo by asking about the injury.

“All of a sudden my memory of who she was didn’t match up with her memory of who she was. And I had this feeling that maybe I didn’t know her at all,” Crist said.

Learning the truth about her mother’s accident led her down a new path of study and research and finally to a dissection lab, where she held a human brain like a relic in hopes of uncovering its secrets.

“If you ask a neuroscientist, ‘How much do we know about the brain?’ they’ll tell you we know about zero to five percent. Which is fantastic, because there’s so much left to learn.”

Editor's Note: Crist's story is one of many told at an event hosted by Studio 360 and the Story Collider. See more stories.

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anon 20 January, 2013 07:32:30
Memory is just one component to traumatic brain injury. Other facets of the injury can be just as devastating, including headache, fatigue, nausea, balance and inner ear problems. This issue is a huge health problem among the general populace and it gets little to know place, in part because neurologists know next to nothing about how to treat it.
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Dr Ruben St Laurent 20 January, 2013 09:11:21
Treating concussion sufferers firsthand and witnessing the lack of knowledge in this area, I have been on this journey of researching and treating this disease. Thank goodness I have been successful on all counts and I relish stories of fellow pioneers and their struggle and triumphs on concussion (mTBI).
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