Strokes can occur on either the left or right side of the brain, depending on the location of the blockage or bleeding. Left-sided strokes typically affect language and speech abilities because the left side of the brain is responsible for these functions in most individuals.
If someone had a stroke and could not use the right side of their body, the stroke likely occurred in the left side of their brain. This is because nerve fibers in the brain cross over, meaning the left side of the brain controls the right side of the body and vice versa.
The effect would be termed contralateral. This means that a stroke occurring on one side of the brain impacts the opposite side of the body, resulting in symptoms such as weakness or paralysis on that side. For example, a stroke in the left hemisphere may lead to issues on the right side of the body.
If the right precentral gyrus of the patient's brain was destroyed in a stroke, they would likely have difficulty moving the left side of their body. The precentral gyrus is responsible for controlling voluntary movements on the contralateral side of the body, meaning that damage to the right precentral gyrus would affect movements on the left side.
If a stroke occurred in the left parietal lobe of the brain, it may lead to sensory deficits on the right side of the body, as well as difficulties with spatial awareness, problem solving, and language comprehension. This could result in conditions like apraxia, somatosensory deficits, or aphasia, depending on the specific location and severity of the stroke.
Stroke patients may experience paralysis on one side of the body due to the brain's organizational structure, where each hemisphere controls the opposite side of the body. Damage to the left hemisphere affects motor functions on the right side, and vice versa. This phenomenon occurs because the brain's motor pathways cross over at the brainstem, leading to contralateral (opposite side) paralysis following a stroke affecting one hemisphere. Additionally, the specific brain regions responsible for voluntary movement may be directly impacted by the stroke, resulting in localized paralysis.
If someone had a stroke and could not use the right side of their body, the stroke likely occurred in the left side of their brain. This is because nerve fibers in the brain cross over, meaning the left side of the brain controls the right side of the body and vice versa.
the Left Side.
the right side of your brain controls the movements of the left side of your body, and the left side of your brain controls the movements on the right side of your body. so if the left side of your brain is damaged during a stroke, it is possible for the left side of your body to suffer paralysis.http://www.brainaustralia.org.au/stroke/effects_of_stroke
yes and it parilized his left side
If the stroke occurs in the left side of the brain, the right side of the body will be affected, producing some or all of the following: paralysis on the right side of the body; speech/language problems; slow, cautious behavioral style; memory loss. A stroke on the right side of the brain affects the left side of the body.
stroke is caused by veins/arteries in your brain clogging or bursting. If only effects half of your body. so if the blood problem is in the right side of your brain, then the left side of your body will be unresponsive, and vice-a-versa.
What it does is that means that you have a stroke
Right BrainThe effects of a stroke depend on several factors, including the location of the obstruction and how much brain tissue is affected. However, because one side of the brain controls the opposite side of the body, a stroke affecting one side will result in neurological complications on the side of the body it affects. For example, if the stroke occurs in the brain's right side, the left side of the body (and the right side of the face) will be affected, which could produce any or all of the following:Paralysis on the left side of the bodyVision problemsQuick, inquisitive behavioral styleMemory lossLeft BrainIf the stroke occurs in the left side of the brain, the right side of the body will be affected, producing some or all of the following:Paralysis on the right side of the bodySpeech/language problemsSlow, cautious behavioral styleMemory loss
Only on the Left Side was created in 2007.
An inner ear infection will make the left side of your head feel weird. A heart attack or stroke can make the left side of your whole body feel weird.
When a small stroke, resulting in a partial paralysis of the left side, occurs the damage area is most likely in the right side of the brain. This is not always true but in most cases is true
I'm not sure if you are talking about oil or the gas.In case of the gas -It will run. no side effects.