Sense of smell and sound, speech, vision and memory.
The worst long term effects of hypothermia are of course are cardiac arrest and death. If you have inhaled water, you can have damage to your lungs. Extremities can also lose blood flow and lose function and/or may have to be amputated.
Damage to the cerebrum results in various problems depending on the intensity of injury and part affected. Damage to the - occipital lobe can lead to hampered vision. temporal lobe can lead to hearing and balance impairments parietal and frontal lobe can lead to loss of memory, learning skills, coordination, reasoning etc.
To gain oxygen and to lose CO2.
if i knew, i wouldn't be googling the answer myself : )
When an enzyme is exposed to high temperatures, the enzyme will denature or unfold. Therefore, the enzyme will not function properly.
The midbrain is found on top of a structure called the pons. The pons (bridge) is next to the brain stem. The area is very small and the effects of damage depends on where and how much. The best out come is a mild trauma and the worse is cell death that leads to symptoms such as tremors, physical instability and emotional changes. Some think that mental illness may also be the outcome.
Ansomia, yes. Damage to the olfactory nerve or temporal lobe. One can lose the sense of smell entirely, partially or experience scent abnormailities including phantom or imaginary scents. A little less than half the time these changes are permanent, more often partial recovery is experienced, full recovery occurs least often.
Why do Lord Spiritual Lose there surname and Why do Lord Temporal lose there Christian names
Strokes can cause this because they make a person lose some of their brain function. Brain damage can also cause this.
The Alveoli itself can not be 'lost', but it is possible to lose their function. Alveoli can lose their ability to exchange Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide with Blood. They can lose their elasticity and eventually rupture. Once they have ruptured it is impossible to reverse, and the damage is permanent.
You lose your vision and ability to smell stuff.
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.
One major disadvantage of a temporal database is the very likely ability for you to lose necessary information from the database if you forget to create alternative downloads or storage. The information in a temporal database is only saved for a certain period of time.
If the damage is severe enough the muscle which the ventral root ultimately innervates would be unable to move i.e. paralyzed.
The worst long term effects of hypothermia are of course are cardiac arrest and death. If you have inhaled water, you can have damage to your lungs. Extremities can also lose blood flow and lose function and/or may have to be amputated.
there is much room for error in answering this question. the size of the bleed is important (whether small or large). the type of bleed is important (subarachnoid, subdural, epidural). which specific area of the bleed is important. you stated it was on the front right side. this says the frontal lobe would definitely sustain damage. how much damage depends on the factors stated above. if it was far to the right and quite large, it may also have affected the temporal lobe. specific damages occurring when the frontal lobe is injured can be found at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frontal_lobe. other factors are how long from the time of rupture until treatment and how great the pressure build up inside the brain. everything is dependent on certain information. general answers to what is affected when the frontal lobe is damaged can be found at the above link, but each case is different when an aneurysm rupture is involved. Angie RN
No.