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| *Women health>>>Stroke |
Is facial paralysis from a minor stroke permanent? |
Is facial paralysis from a minor stroke permanent? Cannot tell you the prognosis well in advance, as much depends on age and underlying causes, amount of brain tissue damaged and allied illness e.g diabetes. No not always. Make sure you or patient gets physical therapy! That will improve it! More often then not, yes, however there is some chance, due to your age, and/or brain's ability to repair itself, that it can be fixed. Medicine is not a perfect science. No one can say yes or no. Not always, but more often than not. I've seen amazing things, but then some things you just have to adapt to. Ask Nancy of "Sewing with Nancy" on cable. |
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| Skin Cancer Skin Health Sleep Disorders Smoking Stress Stroke Substance Abuse Pain Management Pelvic Pain Polycystic Ovary Syndrome |
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Cannot tell you the prognosis well in advance, as much depends on age and underlying causes, amount of brain tissue damaged and allied illness e.g diabetes. ...heart attack is when blood flow is restricted from passing through the heart, often due to excess cholesterol built up in the arteries. When the blood doesnt go through, the heart pumps harder and... try writing, but also you can listen to him by body language and spending time with him will help you with this. ...No, experiments have shown that fetal stem cell have no effect, however motor and other activities were enhanced by adult stem cells. There is no such evidence in humans as the experiment was carr... Well, assuming you were already smoking weed when this happened, it might have been a Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA, or "mini-stroke"). Because of your history, it would be worth seeing ... tilt table,,i think its dizzyness test??ive had 3 stroke as well..but,,im ok now..good luck..mary.c. ...Absolutely, The cause of a store is not obesity rather inner aggression that one accumulates. When the critical mass (aggression) reaches a particular threshold it causes a rapidly developing loss... The first one you describe sounds like TIA: transient ischemic attack. You write everything returned to normal. The second episode sounds like there was some residual damage; I would call that a ... |
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