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Gabrielle Giffords was a hiker
and bicyclist committed to healthy living, a fact Giffords doctors told reporters in the days after the shooting would be helpful in her recovery. Besides hiking when at home in Arizona, the congresswoman practiced yoga and in-line skating. An adamantly healthy eater, a Giffords' representative said she ate very little junk food and lots of fruit and vegetables.Doctors say that her healthy lifestyle could have
been a key factor in Giffords' recovery. "After severe injury or prolonged disability, patients lose muscle mass, strength and endurance. So when they're up and ready to be mobilized, the more they have left, the better. The more physically agile and fit someone was going into an injury is going to help them throughout the rehabilitation course," said Dr. Jaime Levine, medical director of brain injury rehabilitation at NYU Langone Medical Center. -
Click on dots below for more information.BRAIN INJURIESGabrielle Giffords, 40, was shot just above her left eye, and while the exact path of the bullet was unknown Giffords' doctors said the bullet never crossed from one hemisphere of the brain to the other. While the path did leave doctors optimistic, Giffords' medical team also made clear the gravity of the situation. "This wasn't a little grazing wound through the brain, this was a devastating wound that traveled the entire length of the brain on the left side," said Dr. Peter Rhee, Giffords' trauma surgeon. Brain injuries usually affect the opposite side of the body, but it is impossible to predict since every brain injury is unique.
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Click on dots below for more information.BRAIN INJURIESWhen it comes to brain injuries there is always the possibility it could affect several of the sections of the brain controlling cognition, speech, movement and personality. Depending on which brain tissues were damaged, doctors say speech and movement can be severely impaired, potentially inhibiting the use of arms and legs, and the full use of a patient's face. Typically these injuries can create a host of cognitive and behavioral challenges, from impaired walking to issues with language, attention span and memory.
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Click on dots below for more information.BROCA'S & WERNICKE'SIn these type of injuries doctors pay close attention to how the injury affects the Broca's area and Wernicke's area of the brain—the two parts that control speech and language. Centers of speech and movement are only "a few centimeters apart," and so a patient could have just an isolated speech injury and be spared disabilities in movement, said Dr. Anand Germanwala, director of skull-based neurosurgery at the University of North Carolina Medical School. Speech is very complicated, according to Germanwala; it requires not only the ability to communicate verbally, but to comprehend and to know when to move the lips.
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Click on dots below for more information.CRANIOPLASTYIn an emergency surgery after she was shot, a portion of Gabrielle Giffords' skull was removed to ease the stress and pressure on her brain due to swelling. It is a common procedure in these types of brain injuries and must be monitored because if left unchecked the swelling possibly can further damage sensitive brain tissue. In a follow-up procedure, a team led by Dr. Dong Kim inserted a plastic replacement, its shape generated by computer to match the shape of the lost bone.
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Gabrielle Giffords' recovery was dramatic
in the days and weeks following the shooting, she began immediately responding to commands, and soon graduated to scrolling through her iPad and going outdoors. At The Institute for Rehabilitation and Research in Houston, Giffords met daily with a team of specialists, including speech, occupational and physical therapists, as well as a neuropsychologist who helped rehabilitate her cognitive functioning. Within two months, Giffords was mouthing the words to "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" and "Happy Birthday" and talking on the telephone. She also walked up and down halls using a shopping cart and did squats. In early June, over five months after the shooting the first photos of Giffords' were released. Taken May 17, the photos show Giffords with her mother and feature that same mega watt smile she had before the shooting. -
Just seven months
after the shooting, Gabrielle Giffords made a triumphant return to the House of Representatives to cast a vote on the debt-ceiling deal in Congress. Giffords, who voted "yes" to the deal, was greeted with a standing ovation. "I had to be here for this vote," Giffords said in a statement. "I could not take the chance that my absence could crash our economy." Giffords later Tweeted about the vote: "The Capitol looks beautiful, and I am honored to be at work tonight." -
In October, Gabrielle Giffords attended
a ceremony celebrating husband Mark Kelly's retirement after 25 years of service to the U.S. Navy and NASA. Giffords smiled, blew kisses, and waved to friends at the ceremony, before standing to attach the Distinguished Flying Cross medal to Kelly's uniform. Giffords sat with Kelly's mother and Vice President Biden, who said, "You look good Gabby. I look forward to welcoming you back, kiddo. You've been an inspiration to thousands of people."