A list of puns related to "Cerebral Death"
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6132925/Black-Venus-South-Korean-spy-met-Kim-Jong-Il.html
During his lifetime, the dog was held up in Japanese culture as an example of loyalty and fidelity. Well after his death, he continues to be remembered in worldwide popular culture, with statues, movies, books, and appearances in various media.
After getting podded with an Expert Cerebral Accelerator, I was checking my training queue and noticed that skills seemed to be a longer train than I remembered. After checking with an alt, the training times on various skills match, even though my attributes tab shows a large difference.
I'm not sure if death caused this, but it's likely. I've relogged to no avail.
This article says they should persist through death: https://support.eveonline.com/hc/en-us/articles/203217232-Cerebral-Accelerators
Anyone else experience this?
In game bug report: EBR-217234
EDIT: SOLVED - as u/Byteflux posted, the skills show a longer train in the skill pane and at the end of your queue (assuming your queue is longer than the buff duration). But if you drag them to the front of your queue, they will be reduced.
My mother-in-law is in the hospice residence. Iβm in Canada, and you are only accepted into this hospice with a 2 week expected survival. She has brain mets from Melanoma. Her brain started swelling 10 days ago, it was considered very severe based on CT scan. She was started on 8mg Dexamethasone. 1 day later it was bumped up to 16mg and her symptoms became more manageable. Less than a week later she started to have more neurological decline, new fecal incontinence, etc. They attempted a bump to 32mg but it caused massive tremors, agitation, etc. So two days ago she was moved to hospice and theyβve started to titrating her steroids to zero (I believe sheβs on 8mg and going down).
Sheβs still walking/talking but presents like someone with dementia. Sheβs extremely confused, doesnβt understand why sheβs there, is incontinent but keeps taking off her depends, and is texting her friends to get her out. Sheβs only 67 years old, and the decline in this past week has been torturous to watch, and for her to experience.
Given the extent of the swelling, and the fact that they are stopping steroids... what is your best prediction on how this will go? How long will she be able to communicate with us? How long until she passes? I know that no one has a crystal ball, but Iβd like to know the typical trajectory from this type of complication?
I'm asking because I have so many questions stuck in my head after my little sister died from an MDMA overdose on the 12th of June this year. The cause of death was cerebral edema and methamphetamine overdose.
My sister took MDMA between 1-4 AM, She was admitted into the hospital on the 11th at around 5-6 AM, CT scan must have been done somewhere between 7-10 AM. We arrived at 3 PM.
She had around 2g between her and 4 other friends. She was taking caffeine pills at the time (I'm assuming due to her recent web history search on "2g MDMA" and "0.3g MDMA + caffeine" along with multiple empty caffeine pill packets around her dorm room and handbags) the MDMA was in powder form and I was told by one of her friends that my sister went back to the room to re-dose around 5-8 times, the same friend said she gave her water, about 3 bottles of 750ml, My sister drank all 3 bottles. Which could have been the cause for hyponatremia which led to the brain swelling. She was also reported to have seizures, vomiting and hit her head on concrete.
I arrived with my mum and brother to the hospital on the 11th where they explained everything to us about her condition and the brain damage. The doctors/nurses said they were trying to give her medication and saline, however, they said it wasn't working as her body was flushing it all out through her urine. Could be due to kidney or liver failure?. They said they didn't perform emergency surgery, craniectomy, to relieve the pressure in her skull because "it wouldn't do much". Later that day they mentioned they were going to do something which I cannot remember to stabilise her because her brain stem was struggling. This is where we had to leave.
The following day we were called to the hospital at around 2-3 PM. They performed a brain death test in which she was pronounced brain dead on the 12th at 1:04 PM. We asked to see the CT scan which showed my sister's brain going from normal grey/dark matter to completely white/grey? with no dark matter.
Similar to this CT scan - https://prod-images-static.radiopaedia.org/images/32492980/8de4d5d640602a0a8a7d026e4aa2bf_big_gallery.jpeg
The doctor explained to us that her brain stem had been damaged, there was no blood flow to the brain and that the brain damage was too severe.
If they had done craniectomy, would it have potentially saved her life?
What are the treatmen
... keep reading on reddit β‘Hello, I would greatly appreciate any help with this, as Google is mostly just bringing up scientific papers and I don't know what it all means.
My brother passed away last year suddenly in the night at the age of 23. It has been 9 long months but today we finally got autopsy results and the probable cause of death was a seizure due to cerebral heterotopic gray matter foci (that is exactly what they told us, not more info than that for now).
He was about 6 ft tall, around 125 lbs (he was a skinny guy despite eating a lot), born hard of hearing (runs in the family), no other health issues we knew of. Definitely didn't have dyslexia or epilepsy or any other cognitive issues that we knew of, but I know he used to talk to himself a lot - I don't know if that's a sign of something. He had one incident where he suddenly passed out many years ago but nothing else comes to mind that could have pointed towards this.
We were told before this diagnosis that he had an enlarged spleen and brain edema but that they were having a hard time determining the cause until now. Toxicology came back clean, as did everything else.
Can anyone please explain this diagnosis to me in layman's terms? Particularly, I would like to know if he probably didn't feel it when he was having a seizure in the night (I obviously wouldn't want him to have suffered). I also am terrified that there is a hereditary component, I am his sister and only about a year and a half younger than him.
Thank you so much for any help.
I'm asking because I have so many questions stuck in my head after my little sister died from an MDMA overdose on the 12th of June this year. The cause of death was cerebral edema and methamphetamine overdose.
My sister took MDMA between 1-4 AM, She was admitted into the hospital on the 11th at around 5-6 AM, CT scan must have been done somewhere between 7-10 AM. We arrived at 3 PM.
She had around 2g between her and 4 other friends. She was taking caffeine pills at the time (I'm assuming due to her recent web history search on "2g MDMA" and "0.3g MDMA + caffeine" along with multiple empty caffeine pill packets around her dorm room and handbags) the MDMA was in powder form and I was told by one of her friends that my sister went back to the room to re-dose around 5-8 times, the same friend said she gave her water, about 3 bottles of 750ml, My sister drank all 3 bottles. Which could have been the cause for hyponatremia which led to the brain swelling. She was also reported to have seizures, vomiting and hit her head on concrete.
I arrived with my mum and brother to the hospital on the 11th where they explained everything to us about her condition and the brain damage. The doctors/nurses said they were trying to give her medication and saline, however, they said it wasn't working as her body was flushing it all out through her urine. Could be due to kidney or liver failure?. They said they didn't perform emergency surgery, craniectomy, to relieve the pressure in her skull because "it wouldn't do much". Later that day they mentioned they were going to do something which I cannot remember to stabilise her because her brain stem was struggling. This is where we had to leave.
The following day we were called to the hospital at around 2-3 PM. They performed a brain death test in which she was pronounced brain dead on the 12th at 1:04 PM. We asked to see the CT scan which showed my sister's brain going from normal grey/dark matter to completely white/grey? with no dark matter.
Similar to this CT scan - https://prod-images-static.radiopaedia.org/images/32492980/8de4d5d640602a0a8a7d026e4aa2bf_big_gallery.jpeg
The doctor explained to us that her brain stem had been damaged, there was no blood flow to the brain and that the brain damage was too severe.
If they had done craniectomy, would it have potentially saved her life?
What are the treatmen
... keep reading on reddit β‘Please note that this site uses cookies to personalise content and adverts, to provide social media features, and to analyse web traffic. Click here for more information.