What is Talk and Die syndrome?

Talk and die syndrome is a relatively unusual syndrome that occurs after head injury. Immediately after an injury and perhaps for a few hours, one seems fine. They do not have to show signs of shocks or cranial bleeding and maybe speak and have no problems with walking or have other symptoms of nervous damage damage. However, as the condition proceeds, the person suddenly deteriorates and the damage at this point may be too significant to cure. In these cases, people come from an interview and look good, who doesn't have to recover from. The overall death of the brain may occur as happened in the tragic death of actress Natasha Richardson in 2009, after he seemed to be less head injury while Richardson was skiing.

In general, when the brain damage is suspected, the best way to exclude potential fatal complications is to perform calculated axial tomography or brain scanning. This technique of advanced scan can determine whether the brain is bleeding or ifhas formed any type of blood clots that could cause the death of brain tissues. Nevertheless, it is not always clear when the scanning of cats should be done. Doctors do not do this for relatively small head injuries, especially when one seems to be fine, which could stimulate the syndrome and die in a very small percentage of the population.

Some people are at greater risk of speech and dying syndrome. People who use blood thinners may have less head injuries that cause bleeding, which takes several hours to manifest. However, because most of these people speak, they may announce that they take medicines that could expose them to a greater risk of slow bleeding from the brain. It is more likely to be scanned CAT to avoid this condition.

In most cases, the type of brain injury that occurs at Talk and Die syndrome is called epidural lemonor epidural hematoma. The brain is separated from the skull by what is called the dura mater, and when the brain is damaged, the blood can penetrate the space between the dura and the skull. Sufficient escape can result in compression on the brain and eventually the death of the brain.

One characteristic feature of speech and die syndrome is associated with epidural hematoma. This is called a clear interval. Maybe there was an injury right after the injury, one can lose consciousness and then regain it and seems good. In fact, they are not so and should have a CAT scan to eliminate brain bleeding. Finding out the lucid interval for wellness is what generally leads to death in this form of injuries. If this clear interval is properly diagnosed, surgery on the brain to stop the pressure of bleeding and release from the accumulation significantly increases the survival rate, and most people who are diagnosed early will survive this brain injury and perform complete recovery.

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