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Cerebral ventriculography

 
Wikipedia: Cerebral ventriculography

Cerebral ventriculography is a medical procedure developed by Walter Dandy, and designed to enable visualization of structures inside the skull. In this procedure, holes are drilled in the skull, and air pumped through the holes in to the ventricles,[1] to facilitate clearer imaging on X-rays.

It has been replaced by more effective and less invasive imaging techniques.

The term "ventriculography" is also sometimes used to describe imaging of the ventricles of the heart.[2]

References


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