Yes, an individual can survive the removal of the left side of the frontal lobe, although they would likely have many impairments, some of which might include deficits in problem solving and decision making abilities.
Yes. They would be able to live and function, though their personality may be a bit different. The brainstem is what keeps the heart beating and lungs breathing, so that is what a person needs to keep their body alive. The frontal lobes are involved with behavior and motor functions.
Actual damage to any part of the brain is not usually curable or reversible. About 15% can seem better a year later if the damage is mild. See the link below for more information:
This indicates damage (either from trauma,dementia conditions, vascular causes or tumors, and more rarely from infections) to the left portion of the frontal lobe (area) of the brain.
Left temporal.
yes. it affects the part of the brain that controls emotions, hence, a frontal lobotomy makes a person emotionless
The left frontal lobe.
The frontal lobe is used in decision making.
This indicates damage (either from trauma,dementia conditions, vascular causes or tumors, and more rarely from infections) to the left portion of the frontal lobe (area) of the brain.
Left frontal lobe
Left temporal.
yes. it affects the part of the brain that controls emotions, hence, a frontal lobotomy makes a person emotionless
The left frontal lobe.
The frontal lobe is used in decision making.
Frontal lobe
The back of the head is usually the parietal lobe and occipital lobe.
The frontal lobe contains the personality and perception of time and space. Damaging the frontal lobe would probably change a persons personality. A pre-frontal lobotomy has been preformed on patients that had excessive behaviors. The procedure, now abandoned, made the patients meek, useless and sometimes just staring into space.
frontal lobe, parietal lobe, occipital lobe, and the temporal lobe
left; frontal lobe
it seperates the parietal from the frontal lobe, also it seperates the primary motor lobe from the primary somatosensory cortex.