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February 28, 2007 -- 10:04 PM
posted by alison
well... i know, from time to time, i have flowers on my mind, but in my brain is something new...
actually, what i was kind-of referring to would be the National Geographic cited studies of how Schizophrenia is more commonly found in people who have larger, uh, holes in their brains... (sinuses??)
February 28, 2007 -- 10:01 PM
posted by alison
ooo!! me, Mary, sign me up!! i am totally interested, but i'll e-mail you too.
February 28, 2007 -- 7:28 PM
posted by Jsese
ahh, how I miss those little colored pins. wait!!! what did I say?
February 28, 2007 -- 7:26 PM
posted by Jsese
yes I would Al, though I am also interested. I'll get in contact with you Mary before friday.
February 28, 2007 -- 5:34 PM
posted by Chris
I don't think schizophrenia causes cisterns in the brain. Usually it's other cognitive disorders such as dementia and alzheimers that cause cisterns or deposits that affect function in the brain. Either that or severe head trauma. I think. It's been a while since I covered the brain. But I never covered schizophrenia as it isn't nutritionally significant. By the way, cardiac surgery ICU is very cool. Definately a happening place to be.
February 28, 2007 -- 5:09 PM
posted by mary
hey, is anyone interested in going to see Feist at the Winspear May 18th? let me know...tickets are on sale this Friday, and I'm going to try and get some.
February 28, 2007 -- 4:06 PM
posted by Par
Cisterns in your brain are little subarachnoid spaces where cerebrospinal fluid can collect. (So, in that sense, they are a lot like reservoirs.) They all have quasi-logical names, but I have no idea why they are clinically relevant, and apparently I have to know where they are and what they're called if there happens to be a coloured pin sticking in one of them Friday morning.
Also, I'm not sure it's schizophrenia that leaves large spaces in your brain. I know CJD and other spongiform encephalopathies do, and I know that if you have a brain abscess, you would have an abnormal space in your brain. MS leads to 'plaques' caused by demyelination around your brain, which could be considered abnormal spaces in general. And any of a number of causes, including tumours, could lead to hydrocephalus, which makes the CSF-containing ventricles in your brain abnormally large fluid-containing spaces.
We haven't covered schizophrenia yet, though, and I could be wrong.
(Oh, and I thought you knew that there are flowers in your brain.)
February 28, 2007 -- 3:03 PM
posted by edo
“Calgary was very attractive,†said Laraque, whose no-trade deal in Phoenix allowed him to pick his destination. “Not really liking the way things ended in Edmonton, the best place to go would have been Calgary, definitely.
“It was closer than a lot of people thought. For a while, in my head, I said I was going. I was really fantasizing about wearing Flames red and coming to Edmonton and showing the people who thought the Oilers made a good move by getting rid of me.â€
We love you too George.
link
February 28, 2007 -- 12:47 PM
posted by alison
wait, where are there reservoirs and cavities in the brain?? i thought that if there were large spaces in the brain it meant you had something wrong with you (like schizophrenia), or is it just "abnormally large spaces" that mean that?
and, um, flower stalks? right Paras, I'm the one taking botany-type-classes, not you... ;)
edit: i'm sure it doesn't help that "cistern" evokes an image of a rough-hewn stone-lined water reservoir... but meh, i'm sure you can explain away my idea that i have a water-well in my brain, haha!
