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PedAM

Pediatric Disease Annotations & Medicines




Disease hydrocephalus
Symptom C0020538|hypertension
Sentences 7
PubMedID- 25195644 Background: post-craniectomy hydrocephalus in patients with intracranial hypertension is becoming a major concern for neurosurgeons because of the increasing number of hospital admissions for head trauma, stroke and other lesions which may lead to severe brain oedema requiring decompressive craniectomy.
PubMedID- 26346103 Acute ventricular hydrocephalus with intracranial hypertension and brain herniation can result in cerebral compression, medullary compression (respiratory compromise), and eventually death.
PubMedID- 23493480 in contrast, va shunts became the standard treatment for intracranial hypertension due to hydrocephalus since 1952. furthermore, over the subsequent years, the favorable intervention led to notable concerns with the recognition of various range of severe and even life-threatening complications that closely related to the circulatory system.
PubMedID- 23078815 Acute ventricular hydrocephalus with intracranial hypertension and brain herniation can result in cerebral compression, medullary (respiratory) compromise and death.
PubMedID- 24907165 Symptoms included intracranial hypertension with obstructive hydrocephalus in 18 cases and oculomotor anomalies in 12 cases.
PubMedID- 20847917 Presenting signs and symptoms are usually related to intracranial hypertension due to hydrocephalus or compression of the posterior fossa structures.
PubMedID- 26069848 Disruption of this equilibrium, that is, caused by intraventricular blood, leads to intracranial hypertension with acute noncommunicating hydrocephalus, the condition wherein there is an excess of fluid in all or part of the csf space in the brain.

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