Brain damage -- Social aspects. : Neurobehavioural disability and social handicap following traumatic brain injury / edited by R. Ll. Wood and T.M. McMillan
Brain-damaged children -- Juvenile fiction. : Different Dan : how a family copes with childhood brain injury / written by Jenny Tunstall & David Shum ; illustrated by Andrea Quinn
2004
1
Brain-damaged children -- Mental health : Working with traumatic brain injury in schools : transition, assessment, and intervention / Paul B. Jantz, Susan C. Davies, and Erin D. Bigler
A state of prolonged irreversible cessation of all brain activity, including lower brain stem function with the complete absence of voluntary movements, responses to stimuli, brain stem reflexes, and spontaneous respirations. Reversible conditions which mimic this clinical state (e.g., sedative overdose, hypothermia, etc.) are excluded prior to making the determination of brain death. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, pp348-9)
A state of prolonged irreversible cessation of all brain activity, including lower brain stem function with the complete absence of voluntary movements, responses to stimuli, brain stem reflexes, and spontaneous respirations. Reversible conditions which mimic this clinical state (e.g., sedative overdose, hypothermia, etc.) are excluded prior to making the determination of brain death. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, pp348-9)
Brain death in children -- Moral and ethical aspects : Anencephalics, infants and brain death treatment options and the issue of organ donation : proceedings of Consensus Development Conference, February 28-March 1, 1991 / presented by the Law Reform Commission of Victoria, Australian Association of Paediatric Teaching Centres, Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne ; editors, K. Sanders and B. Moore
1991?
1
Brain death in children -- Moral and ethical aspects -- Congresses : Anencephalics, infants and brain death treatment options and the issue of organ donation : proceedings of Consensus Development Conference, February 28-March 1, 1991 / presented by the Law Reform Commission of Victoria, Australian Association of Paediatric Teaching Centres, Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne ; editors, K. Sanders and B. Moore
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