Intracranial “bomb” bursts, patient faces death
At 10 o’clock one morning in March 2006, a 69-year-old woman in Slippery County, Henan Province, was at home doing household chores as usual when she suddenly felt an unprecedented…
At 10 o’clock one morning in March 2006, a 69-year-old woman in Slippery County, Henan Province, was at home doing household chores as usual when she suddenly felt an unprecedented…
Atherosclerotic stenosis of intracranial arteries is an important cause of ischemic stroke, and the risk of stroke recurrence is very high in these patients, especially in severe stenosis of intracranial…
The duration of the disease is often influenced by various factors, such as age, lesion location, nature of the lesion, growth rate, the degree of cerebral edema and the patient’s…
Traumatic intracranial foreign body refers to the open cranial injury caused by trauma, so that broken bone fragments, metal foreign bodies remain in the cranium, the wound can also bring…
When the intracranial volume is increased by various pathogenic factors and the cerebrospinal fluid pressure measured by lumbar puncture in the lateral position exceeds 1.92 kpa, it is called…
In our daily work, we often encounter patients with such characteristics: 1. senior in age, usually over 60 years old. 2. 2, head trauma is not obvious, some are only minor…
The following are the vital signs of increased intracranial pressure: 1. The pupils will be unequal in size when the intracranial pressure is increased, showing that the pupils on the…
The three signs, headache, vomiting, and optic papilledema, are collectively referred to as the triad of increased intracranial pressure. The first manifestation is headache, which is more common and can…
The three major symptoms of increased intracranial pressure are headache, vomiting and optic papilloedema. When brain tissue swelling, intracranial occupying lesions, excessive secretion and absorption of cerebrospinal fluid, obstruction of…
The nursing measures for increased intracranial pressure should start with close observation of the patient’s consciousness, pupils, blood pressure, respiration, pulse and temperature changes to grasp the dynamics of the…