Thursday, January 14, 2010

Frontal Lobe Dementia Erectile Dysfunction Did This Person Have A Stroke Or Suffer From Dementia?

Did this person have a stroke or suffer from dementia? - frontal lobe dementia erectile dysfunction

Autopsy report shows:
The scalp galea subgaleale tissue and blood are free. The roof is free of fractures. Eipdural subdural spaces and are free of blood. The dura mater have no spots or discoloration. The sagittal sinus patent. The leptomeninges are thin and translucent. The frontal lobes and right temporal subarachnoid hermorrhages discrete 1.5 cm each.

The brain weight of 1,127 grams and is smooth. The grooves are extended and the coils are full. Blood vessels in the circle of Willis showed no focus of aneurysms and atherosclerotic plaques. The cerebral and cerebellar hemispheres are symmetrical, and the surface does not scar. The cranial nerves are intact. The bilateral cerebellar tonsils were tapered. The hemispheres have a thin cortex with no signs of bleeding. The white matter underlying oval, including the middle and the beams have no discoloration, hemmorhages or masses. The lateral ventricles are slightly enlarged and not containe blood or organs. Caudate and lenticular nuclei are normal. The thalamus is also irrelevant. The mammillary bodies are not discolored. The hippocampal gyrus are symmetrical and show no clear evidence of sclerosis. The occipital lobes are normal. Sections of the midbrain, pons and medulla show no signs of severe bleeding or areas of softening. The leaves are thin cerebellum. In the white matter of the cerebellum and the midline of the deep nuclei are normal. The fourth ventricle and aqueduct were expanded and contained no blood or organs.

What does this mean in plain language?

1 comment:

old_woma... said...

The death certificate shall indicate the cause of death.

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