CORTICAL PRESSURE INJURY: A HYPOTHESIS TO EXPLAIN THE INCONGRUITY OF CLINICAL AND RADIOLOGIC IMPROVEMENT IN DECOMPRESSIVE CRANIECTOMY

Cortical Pressure Injury: A Hypothesis to Explain the Incongruity of Clinical and Radiologic Improvement in Decompressive Craniectomy

Cortical Pressure Injury: A Hypothesis to Explain the Incongruity of Clinical and Radiologic Improvement in Decompressive Craniectomy

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It has astonished neuroscientists since the advent of decompressive craniectomy as to why a seemingly successfully achieved goal of reduction in intracranial pressure (ICP), by removing a portion of the cranial vault and the resultant intracranial PURE FOOD WOM 50+ volume augmentation, fails to give the desired beneficial clinical outcome in every case and in fact, at times, proves to be deleterious in some conditions with a shared problem of refractory raised ICP.The authors propose a hypothesis based on the understanding of the anatomy and physiology of the brain that Child Safety can explain the fallacy.

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