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A client with a long history of cigarette smoking and poorly controlled hypertension is

experiencing psychomotor deficits due to hemorrhagic brain damage. Which diagnosis is likely

for the onset of progressive dementia?

User Janx
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1 Answer

6 votes

Answer:

It may be a hemorrhagic stroke because of the patient's history.

Step-by-step explanation:

Uncontrolled hypertension could generate a hemorrhagic stroke within the brain generating the sign of progressive dementia, this is due to the vessel breaking due to the excess pressure of the internal light, it breaks and releases or extravases all the bloody contents to the brain

The difficulty of this is that the brain is the one that yields to a force in relation to the skull, that is why it is compressible against hemorrhage generating these signs as progressive dementia and could even be death or vegetative state

User G Davison
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