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Test Taking Tips
Make sure that you are familiar with the Glasgow Coma Score prior to the test.
Review the neurosurgery section in the trauma chapter.
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What components are present in the cranium?
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Brain tissue, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), blood vessels and blood volume, pathological volume (eg, neoplasm, hematoma, abscess, etc)
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What may cause an increase in the brain tissue component (not including neoplasms)?
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What can be given to decrease swelling due to edema?
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What can be given to decrease the brain tissue component if swelling is caused by inflammation or perineoplastic syndrome?
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What can be done to decrease the blood volume component?
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What can be done to decrease the CSF component?
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What can be done to decrease volume due to a mass lesion?
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What is the Monro-Kelly doctrine?
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True or false: CSF production rate is affected by intracranial pressure (ICP)?
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What is the site of CSF production?
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What is the name of the process that maintains cerebral blood flow at a constant rate despite changes in systemic blood pressure?
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Define cerebral perfusion pressure:
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Why do older people tend to be more tolerant of mass lesions?
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What is a raised ICP with no mass lesion termed?
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What is increased ventricular volume without increased intracranial pressure called?
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What is a failure of proper capillary formation termed?
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What is the risk of hemorrhage associated with an AVM?
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What percentage of AVM-associated hemorrhages is classified as ...