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The brain area that seems to be primarily responsible for the deficits seen in Gerstmann syndrome appears to be the parietal lobe, which is located behind the frontal lobe.
No. Autism is not like locked in syndrome. The two are totally different. A number of children with Autism have damage to a particular part of their brain. Since they are children, many of them can be taught to use a different part of their brain for communication. On the other hand, several different commutation problems have been given the catch all diagnosis of Autism. With Locked in Syndrome the problem is not in the brain but with the brain's ability to communicate with that part of the body that communicates with the outside world.
Brain imaging techniques have shown subtle abnormalities in the basal ganglia area of the brain in some people, however another study showed changes in activity in the basal ganglia and prefrontal cortex.
The brain it effects mostly.
the effects are they cannot speak or do anything. If they were not talked to as babies or toddlers the part of your brain that does speech doesn't develop
The segment of spinal cord affected by central cord syndrome is the cervical segment, the part of the spinal cord that is encased within the first seven vertebrae, running from the base of the brain and into the neck.
Down Syndrome is a genetic disorder that occurs as a result of an extra copy, or part thereof, of chromosome 21. The body systems that Down Syndrome affects may include the heart and lungs. Down Syndrome also affects physical development and intellectual disability.
The part of the brain that connects to the spinal cord. The brain stem controls functions basic to the survival of all animals, such as heart sensory information from the body including calculating location and speed of objects.
Amnesia usually effects a certain part of the brain that contains personal information, recent memories, etc... The language center of your brain is in a different part, and is usually uneffected.
Yes because aspergers is a syndrome and schizophrenia affects a different part of the brain, possible but very rare.
a congenital brain malformation involving the cerebellum and the fluid filled spaces around it. A key feature of this syndrome is the partial or even complete absence of the part of the brain located between the two cerebellar hemispheres (cerebellar vermis). The Dandy-Walker complex is a genetically sporadic disorder that occurs one in every 25,000 live births, mostly in females. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dandy-Walker_syndrome