No. Dismemberment refers to severing limbs from a body.
yes.
Bereavement is considered a normal response to a death or other loss. A doctor who suspects that a patient is suffering from traumatic or complicated grief, however, may use various psychological inventories or questionnaires.
Plastic surgery for traumatic injuries of the auricle is preceded by thorough cleansing of the wound and debridement of damaged tissue.
An initial phase for uncovering and "mapping" the patient's alters; a phase of treating the traumatic memories and "fusing" the alters; and a phase of consolidating the patient's newly integrated personality.
no <><><><><> Yes
The patient suffered a traumatic head injury and it was determined he would be a vegetable for the rest of his life. My favorate vegetable is the potato.
3 years
It depends on the severity of the injury and what kind of injury it is. I can say that it is unlikely for someone to fully recover from a traumatic brain injury, as even the known "miracle recoveries" often report mental fatigue and 'not being the same as before'.
yes!
After traumatic damage to the pneumotaxic center, a patient is likely to exhibit irregular and deep respirations known as Cheyne-Stokes respiration. This occurs due to the disrupted regulation of breathing patterns, leading to periods of hyperventilation followed by apnea. The pneumotaxic center typically helps modulate the rhythm and depth of breathing, and its impairment can result in erratic respiratory patterns.
An AIDS patient
Robert Lane has written: 'The confetti kid!' -- subject(s): Fiction, Post-traumatic stress disorder, Patients, Psychics, Psychotherapist and patient