Conditions · Fordham

Concussion & TBI Treatment in Fordham

Concussions and mild traumatic brain injuries (mTBI) are frequently undiagnosed after car accidents. Symptoms may be subtle initially — headache, dizziness, difficulty concentrating — but can become debilitating without proper evaluation and management.

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Concussion Treatment for Fordham Patients

Concussion After a Car Accident Near Fordham

Fordham is one of the Bronx's most accessible neighborhoods, centered on Fordham Road — the borough's busiest commercial corridor. Fordham Road carries bus, truck, and passenger traffic six lanes wide — pedestrian knockdowns from turning vehicles and rear-end collisions at the Grand Concourse intersection are among the most common mechanisms in and around Fordham. A concussion occurs when the brain impacts the inner skull during sudden acceleration or deceleration — the same forces present in every car accident. The brain's soft tissue strikes the rigid skull, causing neuronal stretching, metabolic disruption, and inflammation. Critically, concussions occur without loss of consciousness in the majority of cases, leading to massive underdiagnosis.

Symptoms to Watch For

Headache, dizziness, confusion, difficulty concentrating, memory problems, light and noise sensitivity, sleep disturbances, irritability, and "brain fog." Symptoms may be subtle initially and worsen over 24-72 hours. Some patients don't recognize symptoms for days because they attribute them to "stress" or "not sleeping well" after the accident.

How MAIC Diagnoses Concussion (mild traumatic brain injury, mTBI, closed head injury)

MAIC's neurological evaluation for suspected concussion includes the Sport Concussion Assessment Tool (SCAT5) adapted for motor vehicle trauma, vestibular-ocular motor screening (VOMS), cognitive assessment, and balance testing. While standard CT scans are typically normal in concussion, brain MRI with susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) can identify microhemorrhages in more severe cases. Serial neurocognitive testing documents the trajectory of recovery — or persistence of deficits.

Treatment at MAIC

Concussion management follows a graduated return-to-activity protocol. Initial cognitive and physical rest (24-48 hours) is followed by progressive reintroduction of activities based on symptom response. Dr. Belok's neurology team monitors recovery with serial symptom inventories and cognitive testing. For persistent post-concussion syndrome (symptoms beyond 4 weeks), targeted vestibular rehabilitation, vision therapy, and headache management address specific symptom clusters. MAIC documents every stage of recovery for litigation.

Documentation That Wins Cases

Concussion documentation is high-value in PI cases because TBI — even "mild" TBI — carries significant settlement potential when properly documented. MAIC builds the case through initial symptom inventory with timestamp, serial neurocognitive testing showing deficits, documented functional impact (inability to work, drive, or perform daily activities), and clear causation narrative linking the mechanism to the brain injury.

Your MAIC Providers

Concussion patients from Fordham are treated by Dr. Lennart Belok (Neurology) and Dr. Fred Cohen (Headache Medicine) at our 60,000 sq ft facility at 2522 Hughes Ave, Bronx NY 10458.

Getting Here from Fordham

B, D, and 4 trains stop at Fordham Road station — MAIC at 2522 Hughes Ave is a 7-minute walk east. Fordham residents have the shortest commute to MAIC of any neighborhood — most patients arrive on foot or by the Bx12 crosstown bus.




Clinical Detail

How Concussion & TBI Develops After an Accident Near Fordham

Concussion (mild traumatic brain injury/mTBI) occurs when collision forces cause the brain to accelerate and decelerate within the skull, producing diffuse axonal shearing. Symptoms may be subtle: headache, difficulty concentrating, memory problems, light/noise sensitivity, sleep disturbance, mood changes. Many patients don't recognize they have a concussion until symptoms persist for weeks.

Accident Patterns in Fordham

Fordham Road is the Bronx's primary commercial corridor and one of NYC's busiest shopping streets. The concentration of bus routes (Bx12 SBS, Bx22, Bx34), delivery trucks, and pedestrian traffic creates a high-density accident environment. The Fordham Road/Jerome Avenue intersection is one of the top 10 most dangerous intersections in the Bronx for pedestrian injuries.

Primary corridors: Fordham Road (E. and W.), Third Avenue, Jerome Avenue at Fordham, Grand Concourse at Fordham, Webster Avenue, Southern Boulevard.

Diagnostic Pathway at MAIC

Neurological evaluation includes cognitive screening (orientation, attention, memory, executive function), balance testing (Romberg, tandem gait), cranial nerve examination, and symptom inventory (Post-Concussion Symptom Scale). Brain MRI rules out structural pathology. Serial follow-up documents symptom trajectory and recovery timeline.

Treatment Protocol

Concussion management follows graduated return-to-activity protocols. Neurology follow-up monitors cognitive recovery and adjusts activity restrictions. Vestibular rehabilitation addresses balance and dizziness symptoms. Pain management treats post-traumatic headache and cervicogenic headache components. Dr. Fred Cohen specializes in post-traumatic headache management.

Documentation for Your PI Claim

Concussion cases carry substantial settlement value but require rigorous documentation. MAIC's neurologists record serial cognitive assessments, balance test results, and functional impact inventories that demonstrate ongoing impairment. This objective documentation counters the defense argument that concussion is "subjective."

Your Treating Team

MAIC Physicians for Concussion & TBI

Board-certified specialists who treat concussion & tbi after car accidents. All physicians are experienced in PI documentation and available for deposition.

Getting to MAIC from Fordham

Transit, Driving & Community Context

Detailed directions: MAIC is directly on Fordham Road at Hughes Avenue. B and D trains stop at Fordham Rd station — a 2-minute walk. The 4 train at Fordham-Jerome is 5 minutes away. Bx12 SBS crosstown bus stops at our door.

Why Fordham residents come to MAIC: MAIC is located in Fordham — patients can walk from the subway. No travel time, no transfer. Our facility is the most accessible Article 28 PI center in the Bronx.

Community: Fordham is home to Fordham University and a dense residential population. The neighborhood's heavy foot traffic, commercial activity, and multi-modal transit create diverse injury patterns — from pedestrian knockdowns to bus accidents to delivery truck collisions.


FAQ

Concussion & TBI Questions

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