Legal Claims for Anoxic and Hypoxic Brain Injuries
Anoxic and hypoxic brain injuries occur when the brain is deprived of oxygen. An anoxic injury involves a complete lack of oxygen; a hypoxic injury involves reduced oxygen supply. The brain is extraordinarily sensitive to oxygen deprivation — irreversible brain damage can begin within just four to six minutes without adequate oxygen. According to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), anoxic-hypoxic brain injuries can cause devastating cognitive impairment, physical disability, and death, even when the oxygen deprivation lasts only minutes.
At Roden Law, our anoxic brain injury lawyers represent victims and families across Georgia and South Carolina whose brain injuries were caused by another party’s negligence — whether through medical malpractice, workplace hazards, defective products, or premises liability failures.
Common Causes of Anoxic and Hypoxic Brain Injuries
Oxygen deprivation brain injuries result from a variety of negligent acts and conditions:
- Medical malpractice: Anesthesia errors, surgical complications, failure to monitor oxygen levels, delayed intubation, and medication errors
- Birth injuries: Umbilical cord complications, placental abruption, and failure to perform timely C-section causing fetal oxygen deprivation
- Near-drowning: Pool accidents, boating accidents, and water recreation incidents due to inadequate supervision or safety measures
- Choking and strangulation: Defective products, inadequate safety measures at facilities, and workplace incidents
- Toxic exposure: Carbon monoxide poisoning from faulty heating systems, generators, or workplace chemical exposure
- Cardiac arrest: Delayed or inadequate emergency medical response
- Workplace asphyxiation: Confined space accidents, chemical exposure, and oxygen-depleted environments
The Science of Oxygen Deprivation Brain Damage
The brain consumes approximately 20% of the body’s oxygen supply despite accounting for only 2% of body weight. When oxygen flow is interrupted, brain cells begin to die rapidly. The hippocampus (critical for memory), the cerebral cortex (responsible for cognition and reasoning), the cerebellum (controlling coordination and balance), and the basal ganglia (governing movement) are particularly vulnerable to oxygen deprivation. The duration and severity of oxygen deprivation determine the extent of damage — from mild cognitive deficits in brief hypoxic episodes to persistent vegetative states or death in prolonged anoxia.
Symptoms and Long-Term Effects
Survivors of anoxic and hypoxic brain injuries may experience severe memory impairment and inability to form new memories, cognitive dysfunction affecting reasoning, attention, and problem-solving, motor impairment including difficulty walking, loss of coordination, and tremors, vision and hearing loss, personality and behavioral changes, seizure disorders, and in severe cases, coma or persistent vegetative state. Unlike traumatic brain injuries from impact, anoxic injuries often cause widespread, diffuse damage affecting multiple brain functions simultaneously.
Proving Negligence in Anoxic Brain Injury Cases
Anoxic brain injury claims require proving that the defendant’s negligence caused the oxygen deprivation. Key evidence includes medical records documenting the timeline and duration of oxygen loss, expert medical testimony establishing the standard of care and how it was breached, brain imaging (MRI, CT, PET scans) showing the pattern and extent of hypoxic-ischemic damage, monitoring records (pulse oximetry, fetal heart monitoring, anesthesia logs), and witness testimony regarding the events leading to oxygen deprivation. These cases often involve complex medical causation questions requiring testimony from neurologists, anesthesiologists, or obstetricians depending on the cause of the injury.
Georgia and South Carolina Legal Standards
Anoxic brain injury claims in Georgia are subject to the 2-year personal injury statute of limitations (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33), with a 2-year medical malpractice statute (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-71) and a 5-year statute of repose. South Carolina applies a 3-year statute of limitations for personal injury (S.C. Code § 15-3-530) and a 3-year medical malpractice statute (S.C. Code § 15-3-545) with a 6-year statute of repose. Georgia medical malpractice claims also require an expert affidavit at filing (O.C.G.A. § 9-11-9.1).
Damages in Anoxic Brain Injury Cases
Given the devastating nature of these injuries, damages are typically substantial and include lifetime medical and rehabilitation costs, 24/7 care and supervision, complete loss of earning capacity, pain and suffering, loss of quality of life, and loss of consortium. Life care planning experts project future needs often totaling millions of dollars over the victim’s remaining life expectancy.
Why Choose Roden Law for Anoxic Brain Injury Cases
Our attorneys handle the full range of anoxic and hypoxic brain injury cases — from medical malpractice to workplace asphyxiation to carbon monoxide poisoning. We work with leading neurologists, neuroradiologists, and life care planners to build compelling cases. There is no fee unless we win your case. Contact us for a free consultation.
