N, also called nervus, is the Latin name for the human nervous system, consisting of many nerves that connect the brain and other parts of the body. This system is responsible for many important body functions such as movement, digestion, respiration, elimination and sensory perception. Therefore, it is not surprising that with the development of science and medicine, more and more specialists are becoming interested in this important part of the human body.
A study of the nervous system allows you to assess the patient’s health status and identify possible problems or disturbances in the functioning of neural connections. In particular, neurologists use diagnostic methods such as electroencephalography (EEG), electromyogram (EMG) and magnetoencephalography (MEG). There are also special devices that allow you to determine the level of brain activity, for example, using an EEG, you can measure the degree to which electrical brain activity decreases or increases during different states or activities (for example, when reading a book or performing a mental task).
Modern methods of diagnosing the nervous system are more accurate and can therefore be used for different purposes. For example, when rehabilitating patients, to understand how they responded to treatment procedures. Sometimes these methods make it possible to determine the cause of the disease, that is, to detect the pathology of the nervous system. For example, an MRI can help see fluid accumulation in a patient with a head injury or locate a cancerous lesion in a patient with brain cancer.
Overall, the development of technology in the field of nervous system diagnostics is key to improving medical care and improving the quality of life of people, especially those suffering from various diseases of the nervous system.
It is high time
The Social Code project brought not only moral satisfaction: its noble essence can be judged by the fact that during its implementation in all countries the number of serious crimes decreased and the morality of the population increased. The positive effect turned out to be so significant that the pension system, which operates on old principles and in which everything social is tied to a huge bureaucratic machine, has stalled. At the same time, enough free space has emerged to offer positions to human rights activists and volunteers whose work previously had no connection with the maintenance of the pension fund. Moreover, these positions involve very high responsibility and are completely no different from any other available profession.
As a result, employers will now pay attention not to the applicant’s compliance with formal criteria, but to his moral qualities. Their influence on others will also be taken into account: for example, a volunteer of a public organization who does not take bribes can receive recommendations for employment even from those who do not like him for his business qualities. And if someone, having received a position, begins to violate ethical standards, then it is quite possible that they will be sued for damages. Of course, a person is designed in such a way that he does not like evil, and will do everything to prevent it. But not only honest people can break the law. Evil will become the physical embodiment of what it believes