2008
DOI: 10.1134/s0362119708030055
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The effect of craniotomy on the intracranial hemodynamics and cerebrospinal fluid dynamics in humans

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…However, this dysfunction mostly recovered with time, although some limited results still remained different at the later time points, suggesting that craniotomy mainly has a temporary effect on bladder function. Craniotomy has previously been shown to disrupt intracranial hemodynamics and cerebrospinal fluid dynamics (Moskalenko et al, 2008), and may have temporarily affected neural control of the bladder by either of these mechanisms.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, this dysfunction mostly recovered with time, although some limited results still remained different at the later time points, suggesting that craniotomy mainly has a temporary effect on bladder function. Craniotomy has previously been shown to disrupt intracranial hemodynamics and cerebrospinal fluid dynamics (Moskalenko et al, 2008), and may have temporarily affected neural control of the bladder by either of these mechanisms.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Trephined skulls have been discovered in Europe, America, Africa and Asia, dating from Mesolithic to modern times (see Campillo, ; Lisowski, ; Weber & Wahl, and references therein). There are two hypotheses for the purpose of trephination: therapeutic or magical/religious (Capasso & Di Tota, ; Moskalenko et al ., ). In both cases, the procedure is particularly delicate.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Moreover, trepanation has been found all over the world, such as in Europe (Piggott 1940;Mariani-Costantini et al 2000;Facchini et al 2003;Weber and Wahl 2006;Lopez et al 2011;Nicklisch et al 2018;Tulumello et al 2018;Pasini et al 2019;Piombino-Mascali et al 2019), Asia (Zias and Pomeranz 1992;Sankhyan and Weber 2001;Bazarsad 2003;Han and Chen 2007;Lv et al 2013;Khudaverdyan 2016;Zhang et al 2018;Reddy and Satyamurthy 2019), America (Tello 1913;Powell 1970;Jørgensen 1988;Stone and Miles 1990;Velasco-Suarez et al 1992;Andrushko and Verano 2008;Verano 2016a;Kushner et al 2018), Africa (Margetts 1967;Nerlich et al 2003;Collado-Vázquez and Carrillo 2014), and Oceania (Houghton 1977;Vasilyev and Sviridov 2017). Anthropological and ethnographic evidences demonstrated several motivations for trepanation including post-injury treatment or postmortem rituals (Capasso and Tota 1996;Han and Chen 2007;Moskalenko et al 2008). Aufderheide et al (1998) further propose the three main reasons for ancient trepanation: therapeutic, cultural, and symbolical.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%