I happen to have hydrocephalus :/ and that mass could cause a blockage, requirring insertion of a shunt by neurosurgeons.
Initially CT scan is used to confirm hydrocephalus.
No legal opinion here, but there are some hydrocephalus / trauma links below.
Hydrocephalus, characterized by an accumulation of cerebrospinal fluid in the brain, can potentially lead to precocious puberty and gelastic epilepsy, although these conditions are not commonly associated with hydrocephalus. Precocious puberty may occur due to disruption in the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis, which can be affected by increased intracranial pressure or structural brain changes from hydrocephalus. Gelastic epilepsy, characterized by episodes of laughter, may arise if the hydrocephalus affects the temporal lobe or other areas involved in seizure activity. However, these associations would depend on individual cases and the underlying causes of hydrocephalus.
The right coronary artery would more likely cause sudden death. The RCA supplies all of the right ventricle and more than a quarter of the left ventricle; therefore, blood clotting in the RCA would affect more than half of the heart.
around the left ventricle
I don't know much about this, but my mother gave birth naturally (vaginal) to my little sister, so it must be possible. It would depend on how serious your baby's hydrocephalus is. I have a friend whose grandson's hydrocephalus made vaginal delivery impossible.
Well, the ventricles are at the bottom. So, the right ventricle and the left ventricle, I would think.
From the right ventricle, the blood with flow through the pulmonary trunk and to the lungs.
No, it pumps equal amount
Left ventricle is not a layer, dip head! The appropriate answer would be the myocardium.
i am not sure but i would say boxers and football players because they hit their heads and the brain can swell
Cerebral Spinal Fluid (CSF) flows through the ventricles, or interconnecting spaces, of the brain. CSF circulation begins in the Lateral Ventricles, which are deep within each cerebral hemisphere, separated by the Septum Pellucidum. It then flows through the Interventricular Foramen of Monro, which connects the Lateral Ventricles with the Third Ventricle. Then, down into the Third ventricle, which is a small space within the Diencephalons. Into the Cerebral Aqueduct of Sylvius, which is located in the midbrain and connects the Third Ventricle with the Fourth Ventricle. The last stop in the brain is the Fourth Ventricle, which lies dorsal to the pons and the medulla. Then CSF circulates down through the central canal of the Spinal Chord and back. CSF then flows through the Subarachnoid Space and finally back into the Circulatory System.