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hydrocephalus

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hydrocephalus

Potentially serious increase in the volume of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) within the ventricles of the brain. In infants, since their skull plates have not fused, it causes enlargement of the head, and there is a risk of brain damage from CSF pressure on the developing brain.

Hydrocephalus may be due to mechanical obstruction of the outflow of CSF from the ventricles or to faulty reabsorption. Treatment usually involves surgical placement of a shunt system to drain the fluid into the abdominal cavity. In infants, the condition is often seen in association with spina bifida. Hydrocephalus may occur as a consequence of brain injury or disease.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Principal concurrent conditions listed as contributing to death included hydrocephalus in 58 (26.
A man was admitted to a nursing home following hospitalization for treatment of meningitis and hydrocephalus.
John Erickson, a 61-year-old who lived in Canyon Country until a bout with hydrocephalus and depression put him on the streets, was admitted by the Veterans Administration.
 
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