Basal ganglia softening foci with gliosis are obsolete lesions that often do not require treatment and are difficult to treat.
Basal ganglia softening foci with gliosis are seen in the imaging description of cranial CT and MRI, and are mostly formed by cerebral infarction, cerebral hemorrhage, traumatic brain injury and other foci that gradually liquefy and necrolyze and are absorbed over time, which is a kind of obsolete foci.
Patients will not develop new clinical symptoms, and the sequelae of the primary disease will not be aggravated by the formation of soft foci.
The transformation of the lesion into a soft spot with gliosis is a normal pathological process that does not require treatment and has no specific treatment, so it is sufficient to continue the treatment program for the primary disease and observe the changes in the condition.
In addition, due to the non-renewable nature of nerve cells, the softened foci that have formed will remain permanently and will not disappear.