cerebrospinal fluid Nervous System Diseases : Cerebrospinal fluid in clinical neurology / Florian Deisenhammer, Finn Sellebjerg, Charlotte E Teunissen, Hayrettin Tumani, editors
Cerebrospinal Fluid Rhinorrhea : CSF rhinorrhea : pathophysiology, diagnosis and skull base reconstruction / Abdulaziz A. AlQahtani, Paolo Castelnuovo, Roy Casiano, Ricardo L. Carrau, editors
Cerebrospinal Fluid Rhinorrhea -- physiopathology : CSF rhinorrhea : pathophysiology, diagnosis and skull base reconstruction / Abdulaziz A. AlQahtani, Paolo Castelnuovo, Roy Casiano, Ricardo L. Carrau, editors
2022
1
Cerebrospinal Fluid Rhinorrhea -- surgery : CSF rhinorrhea : pathophysiology, diagnosis and skull base reconstruction / Abdulaziz A. AlQahtani, Paolo Castelnuovo, Roy Casiano, Ricardo L. Carrau, editors
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1
Cerebrospinal Fluid Rhinorrhea -- therapy : Cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea : comprehensive guide to evaluation and management / [edited by] Raj Sindwani, Christopher Roxbury
Tubes inserted to create communication between a cerebral ventricle and the internal jugular vein. Their emplacement permits draining of cerebrospinal fluid for relief of hydrocephalus or other condition leading to fluid accumulation in the ventricles
A watery fluid that is continuously produced in the CHOROID PLEXUS and circulates around the surface of the BRAIN; SPINAL CORD; and in the CEREBRAL VENTRICLES
A group of pathological conditions characterized by sudden, non-convulsive loss of neurological function due to BRAIN ISCHEMIA or INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGES. Stroke is classified by the type of tissue NECROSIS, such as the anatomic location, vasculature involved, etiology, age of the affected individual, and hemorrhagic vs. non-hemorrhagic nature. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, pp777-810)
A group of pathological conditions characterized by sudden, non-convulsive loss of neurological function due to BRAIN ISCHEMIA or INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGES. Stroke is classified by the type of tissue NECROSIS, such as the anatomic location, vasculature involved, etiology, age of the affected individual, and hemorrhagic vs. non-hemorrhagic nature. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, pp777-810)
A group of pathological conditions characterized by sudden, non-convulsive loss of neurological function due to BRAIN ISCHEMIA or INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGES. Stroke is classified by the type of tissue NECROSIS, such as the anatomic location, vasculature involved, etiology, age of the affected individual, and hemorrhagic vs. non-hemorrhagic nature. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, pp777-810)
A group of pathological conditions characterized by sudden, non-convulsive loss of neurological function due to BRAIN ISCHEMIA or INTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGES. Stroke is classified by the type of tissue NECROSIS, such as the anatomic location, vasculature involved, etiology, age of the affected individual, and hemorrhagic vs. non-hemorrhagic nature. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, pp777-810)