Pathologic conditions affecting the BRAIN, which is composed of the intracranial components of the CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM. This includes (but is not limited to) the CEREBRAL CORTEX; intracranial white matter; BASAL GANGLIA; THALAMUS; HYPOTHALAMUS; BRAIN STEM; and CEREBELLUM
Acquired or inborn metabolic diseases that produce brain dysfunction or damage. These include primary (i.e., disorders intrinsic to the brain) and secondary (i.e., extracranial) metabolic conditions that adversely affect cerebral function
Brain Diseases -- diagnosis -- Atlases : Atlas of amplitude-integrated EEGs in the newborn / edited by Lena Hellström-Westas, Linda S de Vries, and Ingmar Rosen
Brain -- Diseases -- Early works to 1800 : Ibn al-Jazzār's Zād al-musāfir wa- qūt al-ḥāḍir, Provisions for the traveller and nourishment for the sedentary, Books I and II : diseases of the head and the face / a parallel Arabic-English translation by Gerrit Bos, Fabian Käs ; with critical editions of the medieval Hebrew translations by Gerrit Bos ; and medieval Latin translation by Michael R. McVaugh
Brain Diseases -- history : The wounded brain healed : the golden age of the Montreal Neurological Institute, 1934-1984 / William Feindel and Richard Leblanc
Brain Diseases -- infant, newborn : Fetal and neonatal brain injury : mechanisms, management, and the risks of practice / edited by David K. Stevenson, William E. Benitz, and Philip Sunshine ; foreword by Avroy A. Fanaroff
2003
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Brain -- Diseases -- Laboratory manuals : Viral vector approaches in neurobiology and brain diseases / edited by Riccardo Brambilla, Division of Neuroscience, Institute of Experimental Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Milan, Italy
Acquired or inborn metabolic diseases that produce brain dysfunction or damage. These include primary (i.e., disorders intrinsic to the brain) and secondary (i.e., extracranial) metabolic conditions that adversely affect cerebral function
Subnormal intellectual functioning which originates during the developmental period. This has multiple potential etiologies, including genetic defects and perinatal insults. Intelligence quotient (IQ) scores are commonly used to determine whether an individual has an intellectual disability. IQ scores between 70 and 79 are in the borderline range. Scores below 67 are in the disabled range. (from Joynt, Clinical Neurology, 1992, Ch55, p28)