Unquestionably the most notable Head injury of all time was sustained by a man
named Phineas P. Gage, known in medical history as the "American Crowbar Case."
Gage, a twenty five year old foreman on the Rutland and Burlington Railroad, was
preparing a blast of dynamite on September 13. 1847, when the blast went off
prematurely, driving a 3 foot long, 13 pound tamping iron completely through the
left side of his face.
Passing along the left anterior lobe of Gage's cerebrum
and out the back of his Head, the bar smashed most of his brain. Though knocked
backward by the blast and obviously shaken up, Gage remained conscious after the
accident and stayed wide awake while his wound was dressed and doctors examined
him.
For a short time delirium set in and he lost the sight in his left eye. But
shortly after that Gage became rational again and was back at work within
several months. He lived for some years after the incident and was studied by
innumerable doctors, who could make nothing of the case. More Nutty Facts
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