Cerebral Infarct, Recent

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added:
15 years ago
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specialty:
Pathology

Case description

Is brain damage always used as the best example of liquefactive necrosis? Why is necrosis here liquefactive?

Can many types of brain damage cause liquefactive necrosis, in a non-specific fashion?

Might this area feel softer to the touch and look less dense on CT, and have more water (i.e., protons) for MRI signals?

Demonstrate it by drawing a line in the interface between the liquefactive necrosis and the more normal brain tissue.

tags: brain cerebral infarct inflammation self-learnig module

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