I don't remember, but it was more for the functional part of the brain. When she went to our physiotherapist who did this impact training—and that was initially the one she had passed—it wasn't specifically looking at the functional part of the brain, whereas the functional neurologist kind of zones in on certain areas of the brain. What he described was that when they tell you, “You have a concussion. Go home and rest”, it's actually shutting down areas of the brain. He said that if it's a mild concussion, that's fine, but if your concussion is not getting better after a couple of weeks, that's when you know things are bad.
His point was that getting the treatment early on at that point and getting those areas of the brain to wake up and get stimulated is truly what needs to happen. It was a good four months into it before we even saw him, so a lot of those areas of the brain, the functional parts, needed to be woken up. That's kind of how he put it. He was trained in Atlanta, Georgia, with the same doctor who did all of Sidney Crosby's concussion work. That's whom he trained with. He even says that he's constantly learning. The brain is so abstract. He is constantly learning about it, every time he goes down for more training. A lot of the things he had to say were very interesting.
That initial one, however, didn't really key in to the functional part her brain. Even though they said, “Yes, you passed,” it wasn't specifically what she needed.