Physical Therapy.
Computer forensics is the ability to recover damaged files from a criminal's computer.
The recurrent laryngeal nerve is the most commonly damaged nerve during throidectomy.
Foot drop is caused because there is disruption in signalling of the nerve to the muscle. The muscle that brings the foot up fails and so the foot drops The nerve can be temporarily injured = neuropraxia and therefore will recover. More extensive injuries to the nerve may or may not recover. A complete transection of the nerve is unlikely to recover without surgery So it depends on the cause and how extensive the injury to the nerve is
sciatic nerve
- Wrist drop occurs when the radial nerve becomes compressed or damaged.
What is the answer
It is a medical test in which a small portion of a damaged nerve is surgically removed and examined under a microscope
Medial strabismus is caused by cranial nerve damage. There is no such thing as a medial strabismus injury that causes a nerve to be damaged, rather the damaged nerve causes strabismus. A strabismus refers to the misalignment of the eyes or a deviation in gaze. A medial strabismus would be the result of damage to the abducens nerve (cranial nerve VI). CNVI innervates the lateral rectus muscle of the eye, which pulls the eye laterally. Therefore, if this nerve is damaged, the eye is no longer able to pull laterally, and the tonus of the medial rectus muscle acts unopposed. This pulls the eye medially, causing medial strabismus.
Nothing dangerous will happen except for that area where the nerve is damaged it will probably hurt but usually it will heal and it will seem like nothing has happened. But if the cells are damaged badly you won't have any feeling in the part of the body where the cells are damaged. Also the cell may not regenerate.
When a nerve supply is destroyed or badly damaged in a muscle it can cause the muscle to not feel any touch. This can lead to further damage.
It depends on what sort of plant and how badly damaged they are.
The cranial nerve that, if damaged, can cause an inability to see close objects is the oculomotor nerve (cranial nerve III). Damage to this nerve can affect the movement of the eye muscles responsible for changing focus and adjusting the shape of the lens to see objects up close.