The standard advice after a concussion is rest. Avoid screens, dim the lights, stay quiet, and wait for the brain to heal.
For most people with mild concussions, this approach works. Symptoms resolve within days to a few weeks, and the person returns to normal life.
But for an estimated 15–30% of concussion patients, symptoms persist well beyond the expected recovery window — sometimes for months, sometimes for years. This is post-concussion syndrome (PCS), and rest alone will not resolve it.
The reason rest is insufficient is that post-concussion syndrome is not simply a matter of waiting for bruised brain tissue to heal. It is a neurological dysfunction — a collection of identifiable deficits in specific brain circuits that require active rehabilitation to resolve.
Functional neurology provides precisely that rehabilitation.
What Is a Concussion?
A concussion is a mild traumatic brain injury caused by a biomechanical force — direct impact to the head, rapid acceleration-deceleration, or rotational forces — that disrupts normal brain function. Unlike more severe TBI, concussion does not typically cause structural damage visible on standard MRI. Yet the physiological disruption it causes is real and measurable.
At the cellular level, concussion produces:
- Ionic flux disruption — sudden movement of potassium out of neurons and sodium in, requiring enormous energy expenditure to restore
- Glutamate surge — mass release of excitatory neurotransmitter that overwhelms receptors and produces excitotoxicity
- Mitochondrial dysfunction — the energy crisis that follows depletes cellular ATP at the same time that energy demands increase dramatically
- Neuroinflammation — microglial activation and cytokine release that impairs neural function and drives ongoing symptomatology
- Axonal stretching — particularly in white matter tracts, disrupting the signal transmission between brain regions
Most of these physiological disruptions resolve within days to weeks. When symptoms persist beyond this window, the problem has typically shifted from acute cellular injury to functional neurological dysfunction — circuits that are miscalibrated, neural networks that are dysregulated, compensation patterns that have become maladaptive.
Post-Concussion Syndrome: The Symptom Profile
Post-concussion syndrome is defined as the persistence of three or more concussion symptoms beyond the expected recovery period. The symptom profile is highly variable — because different brain regions and circuits are affected to different degrees in different concussions.
Common post-concussion symptoms include:
Cognitive: Difficulty concentrating, slowed processing speed, memory problems, word-finding difficulties, mental fatigue with cognitive tasks (“brain fog”)
Vestibular: Dizziness, vertigo, imbalance, motion sensitivity, feeling of being on a boat
Visual: Difficulty with reading (particularly moving text), screen sensitivity, light sensitivity, difficulty with busy visual environments, blurred or double vision, difficulty tracking moving objects
Autonomic: Heart rate and blood pressure dysregulation with posture changes (orthostatic intolerance), fatigue disproportionate to activity, temperature dysregulation, sleep disruption
Headache: Persistent headache, often with vestibular migraine features
Emotional/psychological: Irritability, emotional lability, anxiety, depression — reflecting neurological changes in the limbic system and prefrontal cortex, not simply psychological responses to injury
Sleep: Difficulty initiating or maintaining sleep, non-restorative sleep
The common thread through all of these symptoms is neurological dysfunction — specific brain circuits and networks that are not functioning as they should.
Why Rest Alone Fails Post-Concussion Syndrome
Rest is appropriate in the acute phase immediately following concussion — typically the first 24–48 hours. It reduces metabolic demand during the period of highest energy crisis.
But prolonged rest — weeks or months of strict symptom avoidance — does not rehabilitate dysfunctional neural circuits. It may actually make PCS worse by:
- Allowing compensatory neural patterns to become entrenched
- Reducing the sensory and motor challenges that drive neuroplastic adaptation
- Permitting deconditioning that worsens autonomic dysfunction and fatigue
- Increasing anxiety and catastrophizing about symptoms, which drives PPPD and central sensitization
The research on this has shifted dramatically. Current evidence strongly supports active rehabilitation for PCS — specifically, sub-symptom-threshold aerobic exercise and targeted neurological rehabilitation — beginning within days to weeks of injury, not months.
The Functional Neurology Approach to Post-Concussion Syndrome
Functional neurology approaches PCS by identifying the specific neurological deficits present in each patient and designing a targeted rehabilitation program to address them. This is not generic “brain exercises” — it is circuit-specific intervention guided by detailed neurological examination.
Step 1: Comprehensive Neurological Assessment
Before any treatment begins, a thorough functional neurological evaluation identifies:
- Eye movement abnormalities: smooth pursuit degradation, saccadic dysmetria, convergence insufficiency, accommodation dysfunction — each pointing to specific circuits
- Vestibular processing deficits: central vs. peripheral vestibular dysfunction, vestibulo-ocular reflex gain, visual-vestibular mismatch
- Cerebellar dysfunction: coordination deficits, gait abnormalities, timing impairments
- Autonomic dysregulation: heart rate variability, orthostatic responses, sympathetic/parasympathetic balance
- Cognitive processing: working memory, processing speed, executive function
- Hemispheric asymmetry: lateralized deficits in cortical activation
This map guides every treatment decision.
Step 2: Targeted Neurological Rehabilitation
Treatment addresses the specific deficits identified:
Convergence insufficiency rehabilitation: Near-point convergence training, pencil push-ups, base-out prism exercises — restoring the binocular vision control impaired by concussion.
Smooth pursuit and saccadic rehabilitation: Progressive eye movement exercises that restore the cerebellar and brainstem circuits controlling visual tracking.
Vestibular rehabilitation: Gaze stabilization exercises, habituation protocols, and balance retraining that drive vestibular compensation and reduce dizziness and motion sensitivity.
Cerebellar rehabilitation: Coordination tasks, rhythm-based training, and balance challenges that restore cerebellar timing and error-correction function.
Autonomic rehabilitation: Graduated aerobic exercise (Buffalo Concussion Treadmill Test protocol), breathing training, and vagal tone restoration that address the autonomic dysregulation driving fatigue and orthostatic symptoms.
Hemispheric activation: Targeted sensory and motor stimulation that restores symmetric cortical activation and reduces the neurological asymmetries contributing to cognitive and physical symptoms.
Step 3: Metabolic and Inflammatory Support
The neuroenergetic crisis of concussion depletes key nutrients and drives neuroinflammation. Recovery is impaired when the metabolic environment doesn’t support it. Functional medicine assessment identifies and addresses:
- Mitochondrial support nutrients (CoQ10, riboflavin, NAD precursors)
- Neuroinflammation reduction (omega-3s, curcumin, specialized pro-resolving mediators)
- Magnesium — depleted by the ionic flux of concussion and critical for NMDA receptor regulation
- Vitamin D and its role in neuroprotection and inflammatory regulation
- Gut-brain axis support, as concussion disrupts the gut microbiome through autonomic and inflammatory mechanisms
Post-Concussion Timeline: What to Expect
Recovery timelines vary based on the severity of the initial injury, the number of prior concussions, the presence of pre-existing conditions (migraine, anxiety, prior TBI), age, and how promptly appropriate rehabilitation began.
Weeks 1–4: Focus on sub-threshold aerobic exercise, initial neurological assessment, and beginning vestibular and eye movement rehabilitation. Many patients see measurable improvement in dizziness and visual symptoms within this period.
Weeks 4–12: Progressive loading of vestibular, visual, and cerebellar systems. Cognitive challenges introduced as tolerance allows. Most patients with moderate PCS see substantial improvement during this period.
Months 3–6: For complex or prolonged cases, continued targeted rehabilitation with progressive challenge. Metabolic optimization ongoing.
Most patients with post-concussion syndrome who receive comprehensive functional neurological rehabilitation — rather than waiting and resting — recover substantially faster than they would otherwise.
Special Considerations: Athletes and Repeat Concussions
Athletes with post-concussion syndrome face additional considerations around return-to-play. Functional neurological assessment provides objective markers of recovery — normalized eye movements, vestibular thresholds, cerebellar function — that supplement symptom reporting to guide return-to-sport decisions more accurately.
Patients with multiple prior concussions often have cumulative neurological deficits that require systematic evaluation and rehabilitation. Functional neurology is equipped to identify these deficits even when standard neurological examination and imaging are normal.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long after a concussion can I still benefit from functional neurology?
There is no time limit. Patients who have had PCS for months or years routinely benefit from targeted functional neurological rehabilitation. The brain retains neuroplasticity throughout life.
Do I need a referral from my neurologist?
No referral is needed. You can schedule directly. We routinely work alongside neurologists and other providers involved in your care.
My MRI was normal — does that mean my brain is fine?
Not necessarily. Standard MRI does not detect the functional neurological deficits of PCS — disrupted neural networks, vestibular processing dysfunction, cerebellar dyscoordination. Normal MRI is the expected finding in concussion; it does not mean the nervous system is functioning normally.
Can children with PCS receive this treatment?
Yes. Functional neurology is highly effective in pediatric concussion patients, whose nervous systems are particularly responsive to rehabilitation.
Is this approach safe after concussion?
Yes. Treatment is carefully calibrated to remain below the symptom threshold that would provoke setbacks. The principle is progressive challenge — stimulating recovery without exacerbating symptoms.
You Don’t Have to Wait Out Post-Concussion Syndrome
Post-concussion syndrome is not a waiting game. Every week of persistent dysfunction is a week of potential neuroplastic change that isn’t being captured.
Dr. Veselak’s functional neurology practice in Camarillo, CA provides comprehensive post-concussion evaluation and rehabilitation for patients throughout Ventura County, Los Angeles, and Southern California — athletes, accident victims, and anyone whose concussion didn’t resolve the way it should have.
Contact our office to schedule your post-concussion evaluation.
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