• Gunshots, stab wounds and other invasive injuries can damage the brachial plexus. (ohsu.edu)
  • Although many authors use the term brain injury to mean acute traumatic damage to the central nervous system (CNS), others use the term head injury, which allows inclusion of skull injuries, fractures, or soft tissue damage to the face or head without any obvious neurologic consequences. (medscape.com)
  • But with four of the girls still hanging on last night, surgeons who treat penetrating head injuries said several factors help determine whether a victim lives or dies. (chicagotribune.com)
  • In 2000, Maryland recorded 235 penetrating brain injuries - 208 of them lethal. (chicagotribune.com)
  • There are two types of brain injuries based on the kind of head trauma sustained, which includes the exigency of the injury. (odglawgroup.com)
  • This classification of head injury comes in two types: skull fractures and penetrating injuries. (odglawgroup.com)
  • Closed head injuries manifest if the brain punches the inside of the skull. (odglawgroup.com)
  • These injuries involve microscopic changes that went scattered across the brain which are usually hard to diagnose. (odglawgroup.com)
  • Closed head injuries occur when the brain hits against the inside of the skull. (thefrisky.com)
  • Traumatic brain injuries have life changing implications for an individual and their family. (hughjames.com)
  • Following the war, he undertook a study of epilepsy caused penetrating wounds of the brain and worked on the removal of brain scars resulting from birth injuries. (princeton.edu)
  • Traumatic brain injuries are unfortunately very common. (labovick.com)
  • In addition to traumatic brain injuries treated in an inpatient hospital setting, there are traumatic brain injuries which are treated in the emergency department, by a primary care provider, or at an urgent care center. (labovick.com)
  • There are also additional traumatic brain injuries which unfortunately are not treated at all. (labovick.com)
  • Objects that go through brain tissue such as bullets can also cause traumatic brain injuries. (labovick.com)
  • Traumatic brain injuries can range in the level of severity. (labovick.com)
  • There are different types of traumatic brain injuries. (labovick.com)
  • These types of traumatic brain injuries typically occur with car accidents and falls. (labovick.com)
  • Brain injuries can be described on a primary and secondary basis. (labovick.com)
  • A head injury is a generic term that describes a number of injuries that occur to the skull, brain, scalp, and the tissues and blood vessels that serve them. (doomandbloom.net)
  • Among pediatric blast patients, 80% suffer penetrating head injuries, compared with only 31% of adult blast patients, and wounded children are 10 times more likely to suffer traumatic brain injuries than adults. (codepink.org)
  • Penetrating nail-gun injuries to the head are rare, however, the incidence has been gradually rising over the last decade. (surgicalneurologyint.com)
  • In this article, we present the case, incidence, pathology, and a brief literature review of penetrating nail-gun injuries to highlight the principles of management pertaining to penetration of cerebrovascular structures. (surgicalneurologyint.com)
  • It is imperative to have a high clinical suspicion for cerebrovascular compromise in penetrating nail-gun injuries even when conventional imaging suggests otherwise. (surgicalneurologyint.com)
  • Intracranial nail-gun injuries are a rare but well-characterized cause of penetrating brain injury. (surgicalneurologyint.com)
  • Traumatic brain injuries (abbreviated as TBI) are physical injuries with psychological effects. (hillandponton.com)
  • Motor vehicle accidents, bomb blasts, blows to the head, gunshot wounds or other penetrating head injuries, and slip and falls are examples of the type of injuries that may cause TBI. (hillandponton.com)
  • an estimated 22 percent of combat casualties from Iraq and Afghanistan are brain injuries. (hillandponton.com)
  • A brain injury is one of the most serious and life-altering injuries a person can sustain. (needleellenberg.com)
  • Mild brain injuries like a concussion can heal and recover over a few days. (needleellenberg.com)
  • Car, truck and motorcycle accidents are one of the leading causes of brain injuries. (needleellenberg.com)
  • Errors made during surgery are common causes of brain injuries. (needleellenberg.com)
  • A sharp object that punctures the brain such as a knife is another common cause of injuries to the brain. (needleellenberg.com)
  • At the Law Office of Joseph J. Perrini, III, we recognize just how devastating brain injuries are, both for victims and their loved ones. (josephperrini.com)
  • All brain injuries are serious and should be treated as medical emergencies. (josephperrini.com)
  • That being said, there are several types of traumatic brain injuries, ranging in severity from relatively mild to severe. (josephperrini.com)
  • Both closed-head and open-head brain injuries can be catastrophic and may lead to life-threatening complications. (josephperrini.com)
  • What Are the Most Common Causes of Brain Injuries? (josephperrini.com)
  • However, traumatic brain injuries most commonly result from serious, catastrophic accidents and traumatic events. (josephperrini.com)
  • In fact, construction work is rated the most dangerous for suffering traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) while on the job. (attorneystevelee.com)
  • Initial assessment -- Posttraumatic hemorrhagic shock -- Traumatic brain injury -- Spinal cord injuries -- Penetrating neck trauma -- Blunt thoracic trauma -- Penetrating thoracic trauma -- Blunt abdominal trauma -- Penetrating abdominal trauma -- Hepatic and biliary trauma -- Splenic trauma -- Pancreatic and duodenal injury -- Trauma to the colon and rectum -- Pelvic fractures -- Upper urinary tract injuries -- Lower urinary tract injury and pelvic trauma -- Extremity vascular injuries -- Facial lacerations -- Maxillofacial trauma -- Basic care of hand injuries -- Burns -- Pediatric trauma -- III. (stanford.edu)
  • Penetrating injuries in the Vietnam war. (usuhs.edu)
  • The WF Caveness Vietnam Head Injury Study includes over a thousand men who survived penetrating head injuries during the Vietnam War and on whom detailed medical and follow-up data are available. (usuhs.edu)
  • Dive into the research topics of 'Penetrating injuries in the Vietnam war. (usuhs.edu)
  • Brain injuries are some of the most life-altering injuries a person can suffer in an accident. (dolmanlaw.com)
  • Even relatively "mild" brain injuries like concussions can seriously disrupt your daily life and require months before you feel better. (dolmanlaw.com)
  • As you can see, many brain injuries could occur in accidents or incidents caused by another party's negligence. (dolmanlaw.com)
  • Unsurprisingly, brain injuries can severely disrupt your normal bodily and mental functioning, so much so that some victims require around-the-clock supervision or care. (dolmanlaw.com)
  • Brain injuries can induce a feeling of lethargy. (dolmanlaw.com)
  • Head injuries can range from a minor bump on the head to a devastating brain injury. (mountsinai.org)
  • In penetrating head injuries, a high velocity object breaks through the skull and enters the brain. (mountsinai.org)
  • Most head injuries are minor, because your head comes equipped with its own natural hard hat, a protective skull that surrounds and protects your brain. (mountsinai.org)
  • The most common part of the body that penetrates in air gunshot injuries is the head, especially the orbit. (balimedicaljournal.org)
  • This report presents an interesting point of air gunshot injuries with brain damage surgical management. (balimedicaljournal.org)
  • Penetrating brain injuries resulting from air gunshot wounds require exceptional management. (balimedicaljournal.org)
  • Rahmatullah MI, Parenrengi MA, Suryaningtyas W. Unintentional penetrating brain injuries caused by air rifles in teenagers: Two case report. (balimedicaljournal.org)
  • Traumatic injuries to the brain, cranial nerves, spinal cord, autonomic nervous system, or neuromuscular system, including iatrogenic injuries induced by surgical procedures. (bvsalud.org)
  • Keep your cat indoors is the safest way to prevent your cat from trauma such as gunshot wounds or being hit by a car as well as exposure to infectious diseases such as rabies and feline leukemia virus (FeLV) or feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV). (petplace.com)
  • Injury codes indicating blunt impact or violent shaking were classified as AHT, while injury codes indicating neglectful supervision, gunshot or stab wounds, and penetrating trauma were classified as assault-related TBI without AHT. (cdc.gov)
  • Located in the back of the head and just above the spinal cord, the brain stem controls involuntary functions such as breathing and heartbeat. (chicagotribune.com)
  • Brain infections often also involve other parts of the central nervous system (CNS), including the spinal cord. (merckmanuals.com)
  • The brain and spinal cord are usually protected from infection, but when they become infected, the consequences are often very serious. (merckmanuals.com)
  • Your spinal cord is connected to your brain which controls your nervous system. (thefrisky.com)
  • She had been shot twice at close range, the first shot severing her spinal cord and penetrating her heart. (psychiatrictimes.com)
  • Meningitis is a potentially life-threatening infection of the brain and spinal cord caused by several different types of bacteria. (wmich.edu)
  • It's conceivable that without Cushing's contributions to the field, neurosurgeons wouldn't be on the verge of regenerating and reattaching spinal cord segments , with full brain transplantation potentially not too far behind. (medscape.com)
  • Preliminary studies have indicated that systemic treatment of diabetic foot ulcer patients with hyperbaric oxygen therapy have beneficial effects on wound healing, risk of amputation, glycaemic control, atherosclerosis, inflammatory markers and other clinical and laboratory parameters. (bmj.com)
  • Our secondary outcomes will be: healing of index wound, major amputation and wound infection. (bmj.com)
  • Head trauma - can occur in cats such as from blunt trauma (being hit in the head), penetrating injury (such as a pellet or bullet wound), or by falls (cats falling from windows). (petplace.com)
  • 55][56][63] Richthofen died following an extremely serious and inevitably fatal chest wound from a single bullet, penetrating from the right armpit and resurfacing next to the left nipple. (tristateactorstheater.org)
  • He recovered a bullet from inside the brain and 12 pellets. (advocatekhoj.com)
  • Bullet wounds can shatter the skull and pierce the brain, leading to blood loss and permanent brain damage. (needleellenberg.com)
  • If an object enters your brain, like glass from a windshield during a car accident or a bullet from a gunshot, then you have an open head injury. (mountsinai.org)
  • Air gun shot injury is a gunshot wound from a pistol or rifle that fires a bullet. (balimedicaljournal.org)
  • Early surgery to debride the wound with consideration of bullet extraction is needed to prevent further complications and for a better outcome for the patient. (balimedicaljournal.org)
  • If a person is struck by a blunt object such as a rock, it can cause brain damage. (needleellenberg.com)
  • Traditional teaching has been that the thoracotomy has a reasonable chance of success in cases of penetrating chest trauma , but the success rate in blunt trauma is abysmal and therefore not indicated. (medscape.com)
  • can result in encephalopathy, although it is not clear to what extent the cause is direct viral invasion of the brain, virus-induced stroke or hemorrhage, or secondary brain insults, such as hypoxia, electrolyte abnormalities, and liver and/or kidney dysfunction. (merckmanuals.com)
  • Additionally, it can cause bleeding or hemorrhage that increases the pressure on the brain. (odglawgroup.com)
  • this may cause tearing of the blood vessels in the brain, which can result in a hemorrhage. (doomandbloom.net)
  • Based on the clinical examination and the result of the head CT scan, the patient was diagnosed with penetrating brain injury at the left parietal region, with multiple fragmented objects, intracerebral hemorrhage, and intraventricular hemorrhage. (balimedicaljournal.org)
  • 3 and 4 are the exit wounds, corresponding to the entry wounds, which are injury nos. (advocatekhoj.com)
  • By this point, the patient had been pulseless for more than 10-15 minutes and given the multiple entry wounds to the chest had almost no chance of survival. (medscape.com)
  • This results in bruising and tearing of the blood vessels and brain tissue. (labovick.com)
  • These are changes to the cellular, structural, and chemical parts of the brain which continue to destroy the brain tissue. (labovick.com)
  • An "open" head injury means that the skull has been penetrated with possible exposure of the brain tissue. (doomandbloom.net)
  • Blood accumulation (known as a "hematoma") could occur within the brain tissue, itself, or from between the layers of tissue covering the brain. (doomandbloom.net)
  • This causes the heart to work harder to get oxygenated blood into the brain tissue. (doomandbloom.net)
  • As the soft tissues of the brain get battered against the bone, blood vessels break, and the tissue becomes bruised. (attorneystevelee.com)
  • The resulting edema can then press on nerves, cut off the oxygen supply to the brain, damage tissue, and ultimately lead to a stroke. (attorneystevelee.com)
  • When an object penetrates the skull, it can directly damage brain tissue. (dolmanlaw.com)
  • Also, they can clump together or agglomerate, which can affect their potential for settling in the lungs if inhaled, their ability to penetrate the body's membranes and consequently move from the lungs to other organs, and their interaction with cells and tissue. (cdc.gov)
  • This trauma can cause the "death" of the neurons that are responsible for transmitting messages to and from different areas of the brain and which control the body's functions. (hillandponton.com)
  • The brain is central to the body's nervous system, controlling our bodily movements as well as thoughts and emotions. (dolmanlaw.com)
  • However, the term meningitis is usually used to refer to infection that affects mainly the meninges, and encephalitis is usually used to refer to infection that affects mainly the brain. (merckmanuals.com)
  • Aside from brain damage, open wounds are susceptible to infection. (odglawgroup.com)
  • Brain infection, such as encephalitis or meningitis. (peacehealth.org)
  • Surgical wound infection -- Priorities in evaluation of the acute abdomen -- Surgical infectious disease -- Risks of blood-borne disease -- Sepsis -- Frailty -- II. (stanford.edu)
  • An open head injury happens when an object actually penetrates a person's head. (thefrisky.com)
  • When a blast (or any other force) is strong enough, a person's head can be forced to move so quickly that the brain inside their skull continues to move after the skull has ceased motion. (hillandponton.com)
  • High intracranial pressure that may cause a portion of the brain to push downward through the base of the skull. (doomandbloom.net)
  • Stroke or conditions that affect the blood vessels (vascular system) in the brain. (peacehealth.org)
  • When a blow to the head occurs, the brain can suffer lesions of the tissues and blood vessels. (nolan-law.com)
  • If a brain injury is more severe, it can cause bruising, swelling, torn blood vessels, and other kinds of damage to the brain. (needleellenberg.com)
  • I have to say it would be location, location, location" of the wound, said Dr. Michael Nance, director of the pediatric trauma program at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, where three of the girls are being treated. (chicagotribune.com)
  • OBJECTIVE: Abusive head trauma (AHT) is one of the most devastating forms of pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI). (bvsalud.org)
  • Often, the term brain injury is used synonymously with head injury, which may not be associated with neurologic deficits. (medscape.com)
  • This type of open head injury occurs if the object penetrates the skull and impairs the brain. (odglawgroup.com)
  • A person may get fluid on the brain after a closed head injury . (thefrisky.com)
  • This type of "closed" head injury typically results in damage to the entire brain. (brainline.org)
  • This type of injury is called an "open" head injury and may only damage a specific area of the brain. (brainline.org)
  • It may develop as a result of a head injury or a condition that causes damage to the brain, like a tumor or stroke. (peacehealth.org)
  • Head injury (for example, a penetrating wound or skull fracture) with amnesia or loss of consciousness for more than 24 hours. (peacehealth.org)
  • Simply put, a traumatic brain injury is a type of head injury that is caused by an abrupt, violent external physical force. (bodnerlaw.com)
  • this is a type of head injury in which the damage to the brain cannot be seen (i..e, lack of oxygen to the brain). (bodnerlaw.com)
  • this is a type of head injury in which the wound to the head is obvious (i.e., an object breaking the skin). (bodnerlaw.com)
  • The major causes of hearing loss include illness, exposure to loud noises, ear or brain tumors, head injury, ototoxic drugs, and aging. (autoaccident.com)
  • Head injury can be either closed or open (penetrating). (mountsinai.org)
  • An open, or penetrating, head injury means you were hit with an object that broke the skull and entered the brain. (mountsinai.org)
  • If you are now suffering from a traumatic brain injury after an accident that was of no fault of your own, then you may have a catastrophic injury case on your hands. (bodnerlaw.com)
  • 3. A lacerated wound 3.8 x 2.1 cm present on right temporo parietal region 2 cm above pinna of right ear. (advocatekhoj.com)
  • Wijaya A, Ayusta I, Niryana I. Air gun wound: bihemispheric penetrating brain injury in a paediatric patient. (balimedicaljournal.org)
  • Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a common cause of paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) admissions in South Africa. (bvsalud.org)
  • A CT scan reveals important features of the injury - such as major bleeding or damage to the brain stem, both of which bode poorly for the patient. (chicagotribune.com)
  • It can afflict the nerve fibers and restrain blood flow to specific parts of the brain causing severe damage. (odglawgroup.com)
  • However, continuous swelling of the brain and unconsciousness for more than a minute can lead to severe brain damage. (odglawgroup.com)
  • When a child suffers from brain damage, it can take years before the full effects can be assessed. (hughjames.com)
  • A brain injury claim will begin with the appointment of a specialist brain damage solicitor who can help you throughout the compensation claims process. (hughjames.com)
  • After an injury, the person may be in a prolonged period of unconsciousness or coma, which may result in severe damage to the brain. (brainline.org)
  • A brain damage lawyer in Tampa, FL knows this only too well, and has helped many clients just like you get the compensation they deserve for a brain damage injury that has led to so much grief and pain. (needleellenberg.com)
  • Once a person sustains a severe brain injury, the damage is permanent and cannot be reversed. (needleellenberg.com)
  • A fall can cause significant brain damage. (needleellenberg.com)
  • If an anesthetic is not administered correctly prior to surgery, a patient can sustain brain damage. (needleellenberg.com)
  • An experienced brain damage lawyer in Tampa, Florida has been through this before and can provide the legal guidance you will need. (needleellenberg.com)
  • If you or your loved one has suffered from a brain injury, there are legal options to consider with your Tampa brain damage lawyer. (needleellenberg.com)
  • Instead, damage is internal only, affecting the brain but not the exterior structures that support it. (josephperrini.com)
  • Because there is no visible damage, people may be slower to seek treatment for a closed-head brain injury. (josephperrini.com)
  • The nine Amish girls shot in the head Monday by a deranged milk truck driver faced long odds: National statistics show that only 5 percent of people who sustain such gunshot wounds survive them. (chicagotribune.com)
  • The Brain Injury Association of America (BIAA) reports that annually 1.5 million people will sustain a traumatic brain injury (TBI) with 80,000 people experiencing the onset of long-term disabilities. (brainline.org)
  • Every 23 seconds one person in America will sustain a traumatic brain injury (BIAA, 2007). (brainline.org)
  • This model enables us to define animal welfare outcomes for shooting and wounding of game mammals. (nature.com)
  • Outcomes from traumatic brain injury (TBI) including mortality differ significantly between high-, middle-, and low-income countries. (bvsalud.org)
  • Brain contusions commonly are identified in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) and represent regions of primary neuronal and vascular injury. (medscape.com)
  • Contusions of the brain are most commonly seen in the inferior frontal lobe and the anterior inferior temporal lobe. (medscape.com)
  • [ 24 ] Imaging findings in brain contusions tend to vary because of the stages of evolution common to these lesions. (medscape.com)
  • Initially, CT findings can be normal or minimally abnormal because the partial volumes between the dense microhemorrhages and the hypodense edema can render contusions isoattenuating relative to the surrounding brain. (medscape.com)
  • As such, the radiographic findings are usually associated with underlying brain contusions, although significant brain injury may occur without these findings. (medscape.com)
  • Brain contusions are a lot more serious than bruises from a bump on the arm or leg. (mountsinai.org)
  • It can also occur after an accident involving the penetration of an object through the skull and into brain. (nolan-law.com)
  • This occurs when there is a break in the skull, or penetration, such as a gunshot wound. (labovick.com)
  • Brain tumors - can cause head pressing in cats. (petplace.com)
  • Brain tumors may be primary arising from brain tissues or secondary developing from either surrounding or distant tissues. (petplace.com)
  • Some tumors can develop in other locations in the body and spread (metastasize) to the brain. (petplace.com)
  • In his 48-year career, Cushing would pioneer myriad advances, including perfecting how to access and resect brain tumors through a range of surgical approaches. (medscape.com)
  • With an open brain injury, a break has occurred to the skull and an object has penetrated the brain. (nolan-law.com)
  • A traumatic brain injury is a type of injury where brain cells deteriorate and die, typically as a result of an impact such as a blow to the head, a violent shake to the body, or a puncture wound where a foreign object pierces the brain. (needleellenberg.com)
  • Overview of Prion Diseases Prion diseases are progressive, fatal, and untreatable degenerative brain disorders. (merckmanuals.com)
  • Current medical treatments for age-related neurological brain diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's remain largely ineffective, despite all the medical interventions that have been thrown against them. (anti-agingfirewalls.com)
  • A closed brain injury occurs when the skull remains intact. (nolan-law.com)
  • A traumatic brain injury occurs when a sudden violent physical blow occurs to the head or body. (labovick.com)
  • The primary brain injury occurs during the sudden injury to the brain which is essentially considered to be complete at the time that the impact occurred. (labovick.com)
  • When a brain injury occurs, it can affect more people than just the injured person themselves and cause pain to an entire family. (needleellenberg.com)
  • When the skull or brain is damaged-even if the injury is a small bruise or hairline fracture-the effects can be disastrous. (attorneystevelee.com)
  • You can also get a bruise on your brain, called a contusion. (mountsinai.org)
  • Traumatic brain injury is caused by trauma to the brain, which might occur when the head strikes a hard surface such as a windshield during an automobile during an automobile accident. (brainline.org)
  • Because some degree of healing does occur to the brain post injury, a person may recover various skills and abilities during the first six months to two years post injury. (brainline.org)
  • In some cases, surgeons temporarily remove a portion of the patient's skull to give the swelling brain a safe outlet. (chicagotribune.com)
  • After being shot in 1881, he died not from his wounds but weeks later due to surgeons probing with dirty fingers and instruments. (medscape.com)
  • A penetrating wound was then made to the left temple, probably by a single-sided knife, which was used to pry open the head and remove the brain. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • This protocol for a systematic review aims at identifying the beneficial and harmful effects of adding hyperbaric oxygen therapy to standard wound care for diabetic foot ulcers. (bmj.com)
  • We plan to include all relevant randomised clinical trials assessing the effects of hyperbaric oxygen therapy in the treatment of diabetic foot ulcer versus any control group with any intervention defined as standard wound care or similar, together with sham interventions. (bmj.com)
  • The brain requires blood and oxygen to function normally. (doomandbloom.net)
  • The brain needs oxygen to work properly, and when it is deprived of oxygen brain cells begin to die. (dolmanlaw.com)
  • Every single one of these incidents can potentially cause a serious head wound. (attorneystevelee.com)
  • Falling debris, uncapped rebar, sharp concrete…the list of materials that could potentially penetrate the skull at a construction site goes on and on. (attorneystevelee.com)
  • Both teenagers sustained penetrating, multiple knife wounds inflicted with a butcher's knife which nearly decapitated them. (wikipedia.org)
  • Even a seemingly minor incident-such as a slip and fall -can lead to a serious brain injury. (josephperrini.com)
  • The resulting impact of the soft brain against the hard inside of the skull can cause physical trauma such as contusion and lesions to the organ of the brain. (hillandponton.com)
  • 5. An incised penetrating wound 1.5 cm x 0.5 cm on left side of chest just below nipple in anterior axillary line, muscle deep. (advocatekhoj.com)
  • One type is a closed brain injury. (labovick.com)
  • This type of injury is typically caused by forward and backward movement that is rapid and causes shaking of the brain inside of the bony skull. (labovick.com)
  • Another type of traumatic brain injury is a penetrating brain injury. (labovick.com)
  • You can imagine how serious this type of wound would be in a survival scenario. (doomandbloom.net)
  • If you or someone you love has been diagnosed with any type of brain injury following an accident or another traumatic event, you could be entitled to financial compensation for your damages, such as medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering. (josephperrini.com)
  • Concussion , in which the brain is shaken, is the most common type of traumatic brain injury. (mountsinai.org)
  • These factors include body mass, allometric and isometric scaling, comparative physiology, wound ballistics and linear kinematics. (nature.com)
  • According to forensic evidence, both shots inflicted 'contact wounds,' meaning the gun was held tightly against the body. (psychiatrictimes.com)
  • Strokes -also known as a cerebral vascular accident, is caused by a disruption of blood supply to the brain that results in failure of nerve impulses to be transmitted from the brain to the rest of the body can cause head pressing. (petplace.com)
  • Your brain controls every part of your body, including your thoughts, feelings, and mobility. (attorneystevelee.com)
  • Measurement of such variables as total brain weight,weights of various parts of the brain, the height of the individual, body weight, various measures of cranial capacity, cephalic indexes, etc. were done in great profusion. (pdfslide.us)
  • He showed that accomplishment as measured in that day did correlate in a general statistical sort of a way with total brain size and body height. (pdfslide.us)
  • As a result of such studies def~nite correlations were found between brain size and some measure of body size within given orders of similar animals. (pdfslide.us)
  • body weight: there is ill the data a definite uniform trend for the brain size to increase with the body size, weight, and length. (pdfslide.us)
  • Such regular correlations among tlne mammalia merely say that as the body (of individuals and of a comparative series of adults of different spe- cies) grows larger, the brain grows larger in some regular fashion. (pdfslide.us)
  • it is of interest to obtain correlations between brain size, brain complexity, body size, and measures of "intelligence" and neurophysiologic and psy- chologic variables of interest. (pdfslide.us)
  • Any trauma of sufficient force to the head or body can cause the brain to shift inside the skull and impact its interior surface. (dolmanlaw.com)
  • A person with a moderate to severe brain injury can experience physical symptoms such as dilation of the pupils, more severe nausea or vomiting, convulsions or seizures, loss of coordination, weakness in the fingers or toes, loss of consciousness, or persistent headaches. (labovick.com)
  • The secondary brain injury is the change in the brain that evolves over a period of time following the primary brain injury. (labovick.com)
  • Optimal care of these patients includes the prevention and control of post-traumatic seizures (PTS) in order to minimise secondary brain injury. (bvsalud.org)
  • Inconsistency in the definition and classification of traumatic brain injury (TBI), along with discrepancies in data collection, has made the epidemiology of TBI difficult to describe accurately. (medscape.com)
  • Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis (SSPE) Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis is a progressive, usually fatal brain disorder occurring months to usually years after an attack of measles. (merckmanuals.com)
  • Standard demographic data, need for neuro-surgical intervention, location of external wounds, CT findings and mortality where analysed. (bvsalud.org)
  • He also furthered developments in diathermy, radiography, electromagnetic surgical techniques, and other technologies used in brain surgery, each groundbreaking enough to make someone's career on its own. (medscape.com)
  • With a $1.2-million grant from the Rockefeller Foundation, Penfield founded the Montreal Neurological Institute in 1934, which soon became one of the world's most famous centers for brain surgery and research. (princeton.edu)
  • In the latter part of the last and early part of this century there was some interest in neurological circles about the relation between the size and structure of brains and the degree of "accomplishment" or "intelligence" of the individual concerned II]. (pdfslide.us)
  • Did you suffer a brain injury in a car accident on Ronald Reagan Turnpike? (dolmanlaw.com)
  • The method involves exploring the regions of the brain with an electrode while the patient, under a local anesthetic, remains conscious so he can help the physician locate the damaged section, which is then removed by surgery. (princeton.edu)
  • Could the use of nanowire structures overcome some of the current limitations of brain electrode implants? (lu.se)
  • A brain injury can compromise your ability to recognize certain shapes or objects, including human faces. (dolmanlaw.com)
  • Though this is considered a catastrophic injury, a traumatic brain injury may not be immediately obvious after an accident. (bodnerlaw.com)