Nervous diseases are diseases that develop as a result of damage to the brain and spinal cord, as well as peripheral nerve trunks and ganglia. Nervous diseases are the subject of study of a specialized field of medical knowledge – neurology. Since the nervous system is a complex apparatus that connects and regulates all organs and systems of the body, neurology closely interacts with other clinical disciplines such as cardiology, gastroenterology, gynecology, ophthalmology, endocrinology, orthopedics, traumatology, speech therapy, etc. The main specialist in the field of nervous diseases is a neurologist.
ND can be genetically determined (Rossolimo-Steinert-Kurschmann myotonia, Friedreich’s ataxia, Wilson’s disease, Pierre-Marie ataxia) or acquired. Congenital malformations of the nervous system (microcephaly, basilar impression, Kimberly anomaly, Chiari anomaly, platybasia, congenital hydrocephalus), in addition to hereditary factors, can lead to unfavorable conditions of intrauterine development of the fetus: hypoxia, radiation, infection (measles, rubella, syphilis, chlamydia, cytomegaly, HIV), toxic effects, the threat of spontaneous termination of pregnancy, eclampsia, Rh conflict, etc. Infectious or traumatic factors affecting the nervous system immediately after the birth of a child (purulent meningitis, asphyxia of a newborn, birth trauma, hemolytic disease) often lead to the development of such nervous diseases as cerebral palsy, childhood epilepsy, oligophrenia.

Acquired ND are often associated with infectious lesions of various parts of the nervous system. As a result of infection, meningitis, encephalitis, myelitis, brain abscess, arachnoiditis, multiple encephalomyelitis, ganglioneuritis and other diseases develop. A separate group consists of traumatic etiology: TBI, spinal cord injury, traumatic neuritis. ND that occur in old age are mainly caused by vascular changes (dyscirculatory encephalopathy, TIA, ischemic stroke, hemorrhagic stroke), less often by metabolic disorders (Parkinson’s disease). The incidence of oncological nervous diseases remains high. The limited space inside the skull or spinal canal leads to the fact that even benign tumors of this localization (astrocytoma, craniopharyngioma, ganglioneuroma) have a malignant course. In addition, the problematic nature of complete removal of CNS tumors causes their frequent recurrence.

Clinical manifestations directly depend on which part of the nervous system was involved in the pathological process. Thus, nervous diseases with brain damage can be accompanied by headache, dizziness, gait and coordination disorders, speech disorders, hearing and vision loss, paresis and paralysis of a central nature, changes in the psyche. Nervous diseases associated with spinal cord pathology are manifested by motor and sensory disorders below the lesion level. Diseases of the peripheral nervous system (trigeminal neuralgia, facial neuritis, intercostal neuralgia, cervical plexitis, polyneuropathies, radial nerve neuropathy, femoral nerve neuropathy, etc.) are characterized by pain syndrome, sensitivity disorders, muscular atrophy, motor disorders, vegetative and trophic changes in the innervation zone of the affected nerve.

The foundation of instrumental diagnostics traditionally consists of such studies as radiography of the spine, Echo-EG, EEG, REG, electromyography, in children of the 1st year of life – neurosonography. They are replaced by more accurate diagnostic methods: computed tomography, MRI, PET of the brain, ultrasound of the vessels of the head, duplex scanning. And, if REG and echoencephalography, as methods of diagnosing nervous diseases, gradually lose their significance, then EMG and EEG remain indispensable. They make it possible to identify functional changes occurring in many that are not diagnosed by neuroimaging methods. In some nervous diseases, diagnostic search requires lumbar puncture, stereotactic biopsy, puncture of the ventricles of the brain, and other diagnostic operations. Since the nervous system is closely interconnected with other organs and systems of the body, for a more accurate diagnosis of nervous diseases, a neurologist (a pediatric neurologist) often needs consultations from other specialists: an ophthalmologist, an endocrinologist, a cardiologist, an orthopedist, etc.

Treatment as a rule, includes a whole range of measures aimed not only at combating the cause of the disease and its etiopathogenetic mechanisms, but also at maximum recovery of the neurological deficit resulting from the disease. For this purpose, physiotherapy, physical therapy, mechanotherapy, reflexology, manual therapy are widely used in the treatment of nervous diseases. Treatment of aneurysms, tumors, intracerebral hematomas, abscesses and cysts of the brain requires surgical intervention. In some cases, surgical treatment is used for epilepsy and Parkinson’s disease. Brain surgeries and spinal cord interventions are performed by neurosurgeons. They carry out modern surgical treatment of nervous diseases with the help of minimally invasive microsurgical techniques and under the control of neuroimaging. Methods of functional neurosurgery have been developed that are successfully used for torsion dystonia, cerebral palsy, Huntington’s chorea and other nervous diseases accompanied by muscle tone disorders, tremor or hyperkinesis.
You can learn more about the causes, symptoms, methods of diagnosis and treatment of individual nervous diseases in the corresponding section of the Medical Directory of Diseases. The Medic Journal website also provides descriptions of the main hardware studies that help diagnose various nervous diseases.

Tumors of Cerebral Hemispheres

Tumors of cerebral hemispheres are benign and malignant tumors located directly in the tissues of the brain. Tumors of the cerebral hemispheres are manifested by cerebral (headache, stagnation of the optic nerve discs, dizziness, vomiting, mental disorders) and focal (motor disorders, loss of sensitivity, visual disorders, speech disorders, neuro-endocrine syndrome, etc.) symptoms. Diagnosis of brain…

Intracerebral Hemorrhage

Intracerebral hemorrhage is a limited accumulation of blood in the substance of the brain, which has a squeezing, displacing and damaging effect on the brain tissue located nearby. Disease is clinically characterized by cerebral and focal symptoms, which depend on the location of the hematoma and its volume. Hemorrhage is most reliably diagnosed by the combined…

Temporal Lobe Epilepsy

Temporal lobe epilepsy is one of the forms of epilepsy in which the focus of epileptic activity is localized in the temporal lobe of the brain. Disease is characterized by simple and complex partial epi-seizures, and with the further development of the disease, secondary generalized seizures and mental disorders. The diagnosis is made possible by…

Viral Encephalitis

Viral encephalitis is diffuse or focal inflammatory changes in the structures of the brain caused by the penetration of viral agents into them. The clinical picture is variable, it depends on the type of virus and the state of the patient’s immune system; it consists of general infectious, cerebral and focal manifestations. The diagnostic algorithm…

Viral Meningitis

Viral meningitis is a lesion of the membranes of the brain that proceeds according to the type of serous inflammatory process and is caused by a viral infection. Like meningitis of another etiology, viral meningitis is manifested by headache, nausea, repeated vomiting, and the presence of meningeal symptoms. Its distinctive features are an acute onset,…

Vibration Disease

Vibration disease is a disease based on pathological changes in the receptor apparatus and various parts of the central nervous system that occur with prolonged exposure to local and / or general vibration. The clinical picture may include polyneuropathic, angiospastic, angiodistonic, asthenic, vegetative-vestibular, polyradicular syndromes, functional disorders in the gastrointestinal tract and hearing loss. Disease…

Vestibular Neuritis

Vestibular neuritis is a selective lesion of the vestibular nerve, presumably having an inflammatory genesis and manifested by a single acute paroxysm of intense dizziness with balance disorder and complete hearing loss. Compensation of vestibular function after an episode of vertigo may take several weeks. Diagnosis is carried out by methods of examination of the…

Vestibular Migraine

Vestibular migraine is a form of migraine in which the symptoms of dizziness come to the fore, not headaches. It develops as a result of complex neurophysiological mechanisms provoked by psychological, physiological or exogenous triggers. The disease proceeds in the form of attacks lasting up to 72 hours, including prodrome, aura with intense dizziness, severe…

Vestibular Ataxia

Vestibular ataxia is a violation of the coordination of movements and the ability to maintain a pose associated with damage to the vestibular apparatus at any level. Vestibular ataxia is manifested by shakiness in standing and sitting positions, as well as when walking. It is accompanied by systemic dizziness and nystagmus; nausea and vomiting, vegetative…

Vertebrobasilar Insufficiency

Vertebrobasilar insufficiency is a reversible violation of cerebral function caused by a decrease in blood circulation in the vertebral system and the main arteries. Pathology combines various neurological disorders: vestibulo-atactic syndrome, sensorimotor deficits, impaired function of the auditory and visual analyzers in combination with disorders of the cognitive-emotional sphere. Diagnosis is carried out on the…