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Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 2008
While obstetric causes of maternal mortality have declined, non-obstetric causes of maternal morbidity and mortality have increased.1 Among the leading non-obstetric causes are neurosurgical pathologies. Although a pregnant woman is essentially no more susceptible to developing a neurosurgical problem than a non-pregnant one, because of physiological ...
J, Ng, N, Kitchen
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While obstetric causes of maternal mortality have declined, non-obstetric causes of maternal morbidity and mortality have increased.1 Among the leading non-obstetric causes are neurosurgical pathologies. Although a pregnant woman is essentially no more susceptible to developing a neurosurgical problem than a non-pregnant one, because of physiological ...
J, Ng, N, Kitchen
openaire +2 more sources
Surgical Neurology, 1997
The development and current state of Vietnamese neurosurgery is presented, in order to highlight the difficulties faced by neurosurgeons in Vietnam and other developing countries.Information has been collected personally by the authors in Vietnam.The conditions of neurosurgery endured by our neurosurgical colleagues in Vietnam are far inferior to those
J V, Rosenfeld, N T, Xuan
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The development and current state of Vietnamese neurosurgery is presented, in order to highlight the difficulties faced by neurosurgeons in Vietnam and other developing countries.Information has been collected personally by the authors in Vietnam.The conditions of neurosurgery endured by our neurosurgical colleagues in Vietnam are far inferior to those
J V, Rosenfeld, N T, Xuan
openaire +2 more sources
World Neurosurgery, 2012
There is archaeological evidence that the first neurosurgical procedure in what is now known as Siberia was performed in 8005 ± 100 B.C. According to signs of bone growth, perhaps more than half of the individuals who received the ancient trepanations survived.
Alexey L, Krivoshapkin +1 more
openaire +2 more sources
There is archaeological evidence that the first neurosurgical procedure in what is now known as Siberia was performed in 8005 ± 100 B.C. According to signs of bone growth, perhaps more than half of the individuals who received the ancient trepanations survived.
Alexey L, Krivoshapkin +1 more
openaire +2 more sources

