Autonomic nervous system disorder (ANSD), also known as autonomic nervous system dysfunction (ANSD), is a disruption in the normal functioning of the autonomic nervous system (ANS).
Constant sleepiness, also called hypersomnia, is a condition in which a person feels a constant and excessive desire to sleep throughout the day, even with adequate nighttime sleep.
Respiratory neurosis (or respiratory neurosis) is a condition in which a person experiences breathing difficulties or changes in breathing rhythm that have no physical basis and may be caused by psychological factors, stress, or anxiety.
Astheno-neurotic syndrome (ANS) is a condition characterized by symptoms of physical and mental fatigue, irritability, insomnia, low mood and other manifestations.
Single supratentorial foci of gliosis are characteristic of trauma (in the form of glial scarring), inflammatory brain diseases and chronic hypertension.
Spinal muscular atrophy is not a single nosological unit, but a whole group of clinically and genetically heterogeneous hereditary pathologies provoked by the increasing processes of degeneration of motoneurons of the anterior spinal horns.
An intracranial or intracranial hematoma is a tissue-restricted extravascular accumulation of leaked and then clotted blood between the cerebral membranes or in the brain tissue.
When the process of glial cell proliferation occurs in the supratentorial region of the brain, i.e. The upper parts of the brain located above the cerebellar tentorium (tentorium cerebelli), the membrane separating the cerebellum from the occipital lobes of the brain, supratentorial foci of gliosis are formed.
Aneurysm is a bulge in the wall of an artery or vein due to its thinning and loss of elasticity. In most cases, this pathology is congenital. Most often an aneurysm is diagnosed in the vessels of the brain, which makes the disease potentially dangerous.