Multiple injuries including brain injury

When a patient has multiple injuries and a brain injury, both the brain and other parts of the body such as the arms and legs, spine, chest, pelvis or internal organs are damaged. This combination of injuries means that patients are usually severely impaired at first.

For example, apart from disrupting cognitive functions such as attentiveness, memory and language, the brain injury can also cause behavioural disorders and paralysis, which can have very different degrees of severity.


Broken bones also restrict a patient's ability to walk and other movements. In the early stages after the accident, patients are sometimes not yet able to realise the extent of their condition and to adapt their behaviour accordingly. The rehabilitation of patients suffering from multiple injuries with a brain injury therefore requires particular caution, care and targeted consideration of the patient's individual abilities and impairments. Our specialised interdisciplinary team of doctors, therapists and nurses meets these conditions.