Meningocele

Meningolocelism is a serious birth defect in which partial or complete meninges are pushed out through the vagina. This very serious condition can lead to severe complications and developmental delays. Treatment for meningocelosis begins at a very early age if it can be detected early and if not



Meningoceles are rough and, as a rule, abnormal birth of an embryo, that is, incorrect rotation of the fetus inside the uterus. The inverted fetus, as well as the divergence in the affected areas when it turns, is then considered responsible for the disruption of this neural structure. Neural variants of postpartum complications that fall under this category are more common, but are not as widely known to most people.

A baby is born with a deficient neurological structure, which means that some of the major nervous system structures (spinal cord, brain, or nerve roots) associated with the area where the fetus was implanted are incorrectly positioned. This characteristic is observed in the very early stages of pregnancy, when the woman is not yet aware of it or does not agree to terminate the pregnancy.

Typically, preterm birth occurs later in pregnancy, starting at least 24 to 25 weeks (sixth month), or less often a little earlier, between 23 and 36 weeks of gestation (fifth to ninth months). The appearance of a newborn born with abnormal nerve development can take many forms. In particular, this process can be unilateral or bilateral, but in any case, the child already has signs of an anoma from birth.



Meningycelia (meningocelia, mingecielosis, langeolyselindrtomia) is a rare severe congenital disease of the nervous system, characterized by the development and progression of an intracranial communicating tumor as a result of the opening of the cranial folds from the inside to the outside during the embryonic development of the fetus.

Meningoceliasis is a rare disease that is not hereditary, as was previously thought, but is associated with external influences (mechanical or infectious). They are 28 times less common than meningiomas of the spinal cord. Mostly from 6 months of age. before