A brain tumor is a growth in a person's brain from rapidly multiplying cells that can affect the way your brain or nervous system works.
A brain tumor can affect various functions depending on its location, such as motor control, speech, vision, memory, or cognitive functions. It can impact surrounding brain tissue, nerves, and blood vessels. Treatment options for brain tumors include surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy, but the outcome varies depending on the type and stage of the tumor.
Alcohol does not affect the cerebrum...rather it affects the cerebellum of the brain.
Yes
Yes, brain tumors are considered serious conditions as they can potentially affect normal brain function and can lead to symptoms such as headaches, seizures, cognitive impairment, and neurological deficits. Treatment for brain tumors often involves a combination of surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy. Early detection and intervention are crucial in managing brain tumors effectively.
Intoxication temporarily affects the operation of the brain.
No, but it will affect the decomposition of the human brain.
yes as long as it does not affect you
A brain tumor can have an unlimited amount of effects. Not only it depends if the tumor is localized or spreads, but it also depends on the specific brain areas it affects. Also, even if a brain tumor is localized, since it is growing, a brain tumor will apply more and more pressure on the surrounding brain areas responsible for different cognitive domains such as memory, language, sensing, decision making...etc... The chemicals of the tumor may also affect how the person interacts with others. They may develop a temper, be angry, have trouble understanding and lose their concept of time.
Alcohol is an anesthetic so it numbs your brain, and it is also toxic, so it destroys your brain cells. Whatever you were, after alcohol you're less.
It depends on the location of the tumor. Most commonly, a brain tumor will increase the pressure within the skull as it grows, forcing the medulla (the lowest part of the brain) downward into the spinal canal. Compression of the medulla can seriously affect blood pressure, breathing, and heart rate.
It temporarily slows the operation of the brain.