Some studies may suggest that they do. See the attached links.
What are the different connections of the different senses of the brain?
Sight: Sight is processed by the visual cortex.
Smell: Smell is a function of the olfactory system.
Touch: Touch mostly occurs in the parietal lobe in the cerebral cortex.
Taste: Taste ins understood by the brain through 3 different never bundles; the facial nerve, the glossopharyngeal nerve, and the vagus nerve.
Hearing: Hearing is primarily a function of the temporal lobe.
What are effects of mindfulness meditation on brain and neurotransmitters?
Link provided to mindfullnes research at Wikipedia.
What gives information to the brain?
Your sense organs your head, nose ,ears ,eyes, and tongue.AS well as nerves and your other body parts.
We smell sometimes because of our nose the bogies built up inside cause smells but smells also build up by sweat by working out or doing something tiring. When you take a bath or shower this comes off but the odour of your nose doesen't. If you wish to get rid of the smell of your nose go to the sea and go underwater. This cleans your nose (nazel passage) . The nose controls the whole smell of the body APART from the mouth and if you eat something smelly you should brush your teeth.
What are sedative hypnotics and how do they affect the central nervous system?
i don't care and my favorite color is purple oh yeah and i am twelve years old and i don't care about this freaking question
What are examples of smooth muscles?
kidneys, stomach, intestines, bladder, the eyes, the walls of blood vessels. Smooth muscles that are sometimes called visceral muscles. They are thin muscles that look like spindles. They can be found in your skin and your blood vessels and your organs inside your body.
What is the inferomedial temporal lobe?
The inferomedial temporal lobe is made up of the hippocampus and the adjacent cortex.
Neuroscience
Is there a specific ball joint for the left and right side of a Mazda Protege?
as far as i know, almost every car is
Mazda Protege Ball JointsI finally found the answer to my own question so if anyone else needs to know, for this specific year of the Mazda protege, ball joints ARE interchangeable.mri
What does it mean when there is a flattening of the pons in the human brain?
Flattening of the Pons is typically associated with several neurological conditions causing autonomic dysfunction.
Can sedation medicine cause brain damage?
It depends what you mean by "sedation medication". Some medications used for sedation in psychiatric conditions can cause "extraparimadal side effects" and these can signal a progression to irreversible damage. A good rule of thumb is any medication taken in excess of prescribed amounts,or without recommended blood checks is going to be harmful in some manner, either to brain, liver or kidneys.
The major source of fuel for the nervous system brain and red blood cells is?
Carbohydrates, more specifically: glucose
What are patchy areas of low attenuation in the brainstem mean?
Since 'attenuation' is used, I assume they're talking about CT. Low attenuation means there's not as much tissue in that area blocking the x rays of the CT scanner, which could indicate atrophy in that region I believe. Yes a CT scan was performed on my son's head. It said the patchy attenuation was located in the pons area of the brain stem. How serious is this and how should he follow up?
What do Nepalese men like in women?
the same thing all men like in women. the way they look, their personality,the way they dress and how they carry themselves.
DebeshiaNo. I agree with some points but they do not always like women's way of carrying themselves or their way of looking. Their usual type of women are those who can look after themselves.
Does estacy cause brain damage?
it can cause you to have heart faliure and you can go into cardiac arrest, which can give you brain damage and you can die from it
What brain injuries are most likely to be fatal?
Damage to the cerebral cortex is least likely to be fatal; damage to the medulla is most likely to be fatal.
Has psychiatry ever caused brain damage and birth defects?
Psychiatry is more than medications and treatments. So it is not psychiatry, itself, that is responsible for any ill effects.
SOME medications and treatments, used in the Practice of Medicine, which includes the sub-specialty of psychiatry, have been responsible for ill effects. But this is an expected hazard of progress in the Practice of Medicine as well as culture. For example, today surgeons know to keep a patient with a belly wound "NPO", meaning "give nothing by mouth". But in the early Practice of Medicine, bacteria were not known-- that discovery came later. So many people died from abdominal wounds, especially in early wars and traumas, because no one knew anything better than to let a patient eat and drink fluids. Even the English let wounded soldiers drink tea, until doctors figured out that this could cause vomiting, aspiration of vomit into the lungs, and death.
Anesthesia was another area that needed time to educate men (doctors) about its hazards. Chloroform, one of the first anesthetic inhalation compounds used for surgery, was a godsend to people who before would have died from wounds or infections. Just a simple infected abscessed tooth could kill. Yet, at the same time, Chloroform brought unexpected dangers--including fire, and including putting a patient so far "under" that the patient died from respiratory depression. We didn't have machines to monitor dosages, or monitor heart and respiration. So, yes, people died on the operating table.
Psychiatry does not "operate", but some treatments have evolved over time. For example, in 1800s "insane asylums", patients were often put into "ice baths". They were restrained in a tub filled with ice below, on top, and surrounding the person. Doctors, back then, did not know ice could be such a shock that it could stop a person's heart, or that a person could become hypothermic. Doctors back then believed the physical "shock" of ice cold temp could astound a patient so much that it would interrupt psychosis, depression, and "catatonic" reactions to life's problems. Years later, hospitals used "steam baths", looking for a mental-emotional change in symptoms, but still unaware of any dangers. (Neither steam baths or ice baths are used now, and "mental institutions" were closed, finally, in the 1980s.)
However, controversies remain about ECT, Electroconvulsive therapy, in which current is passed through the brain to bring about a change in major severe depression, acute mania, and certain schizophrenic syndromes. Patients who have undergone ECT say the current destroyed their long term memories and creates long-lasting confusion. In use for 60-some years, today, ECT is administered to an estimated 100,000 people a year, and is the subject of much controversy. Results vary, widely.
Turning strictly to birth defects...
Birth defects must occur during pregnancy for the condition to be a birth defect. Nothing is done directly to the fetus, but until the 1950s, doctors did not know that many medications pass from the maternal blood stream to the fetus, or from breast milk to a newborn (when an acquired condition could result). However, there is no central database list of medications that DO cause birth defects. INSTEAD, now, ALL medications are assumed to pass from maternal blood to the fetus. Therefore, IF a mother MUST have a medication, doctors try to limit the dose AND duration of the medication for at least the first 2 trimesters of pregnancy.
No doctor wants a medication or treatment to do harm (to an adult, child, or fetus). Developed countries like the US oversee medications and side effect reports. Extensive animal and human studies and reporting of bad effects makes US medication prescribing one of the safest systems in the world. Yet, it is impossible to predict all problems beforehand.
In short, the answer to your question about birth defects is No, except before 1950 when little was known about how chemicals pass from mother to fetus.
What is the machine called your put on if your pronounced brain dead?
Ventilator to keep your lungs full of oxygen and circulating in your bloodstream until it can be decided whether to turn it off or organs to be donated.