An adjustment to a brain tumor? In which cases is timely surgery required?

Meningoma is a common relatively benign brain tumor, growing relatively slowly and generally not a threat to the life of the patient. When found, it is generally larger, and it is only when other functional areas, such as motor functions, language, smell, balancing functions, etc., are oppressed. However, upon diagnosis, there should be active communication with experienced doctors, with or without treatment, and how.

If the meningitis is small and the patient is completely free of symptoms such as physical activity, sensory disorders and epilepsy, then nothing needs to be done, only regular review and no treatment. In daily life, there are no special requirements for eating, eating or eating, and it is sufficient to go to hospitals to review CT or NM.

An accidental discovery of a meningitis, then, requires an immediate surgery, based on the size, location, growth rate of the brain tumor, and whether the brain oedema is combined, and whether there are symptoms such as dizziness or headaches. Meningococcal tumors are detected by accident, and the vast majority of patients are subject to surgery sooner or later.

What symptoms do we have to operate on?

As long as meningitis causes symptoms, surgery is required as soon as possible. Symptoms are very numerous, depending on the location and size of the tumor. Some, for example, have large tumours, which can lead to an increase in the internal pressure of the brain and to high levels of the inside of the skull, such as headaches, nausea and vomiting. But, usually, cerebral tumors cause problems of internal pressure, indicating that they are already very serious.

In the case of brain-dural membrane, the tumours tend to affect the neurological function because of the presence of 12 very important neurons. For example, the tumour pressure controls the ophthalmic nerve of eye activity, which is affected by eye activity, and there is a remnant of seeing. If the tumor oppresses the hearing nerve of the tube, the hearing is reduced or even deaf. Tumorism oppresses the narcissistic and locomotive nerves, with symptoms such as difficulty of swallowing, vagueness of speech, acoustic noise, and drinking water cough.

During the observation period, the size of the brain tumor did not change much, but a new membrane appeared at different locations.

Meningos are mostly benign tumours that do not transfer. This is a medically called multiple meningitis, with a very low incidence of about 1 per cent to 8 per cent. It is not clear why there are many meningitiss, and there are a number of theories that try to explain this. For example, the “Multigenology” argues that, since the brain tumor can grow in this place, it can grow elsewhere. There is also the “single origin doctrine”, which suggests that tumor cells can spread to other parts of the brain with the flow of brain fluids, resulting in multiple meningitis tumors. There is also a very rare genetic disease, neurofibromas, which can also lead to a high incidence of meningitis.

Zhao Tian Ji-ji Director, Tangdu Hospital, described the fact that meningitis is mostly separated from some tissue cell in the brain, usually from the outer side of the brain, 90% of which is benign, and because growth is slow and sometimes symptoms are not visible, and that in many cases, when symptoms occur, doctors find the stoves only after an MRI or a brain fault scan. If left unattended and the tumor grows larger, it may eat through the skull and even crush the brain stem to life. Illustrative headaches and loss of sight are protected against brain tumors.

The brain is the most sophisticated organ of the human body, and some minor changes can lead to significant changes, and should be alert to neurosurgery in cases of unknown chronic headaches, changes in mental state, sudden epilepsy, loss of vision on either side or side, so as not to delay treatment.