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Anesthesia
Pain management and sedation techniques
Angiology
Arterial and venous pathologies
Cardiology
Acquired and congenital heart diseases
Dentistry
Diseases of teeth, gums, and the oral cavity
Dermatology
Disorders of the skin and subcutaneous tissue
Endocrinology
Disorders of the glands and hormonal imbalance
Gastroenterology
Stomach, intestinal, and digestive diseases
Gynecology
Diseases of female reproductive organs
Hematology
Hematopoiesis and blood-related disorders
Hepatology
Liver, gallbladder, and biliary tract diseases
Histology
Microscopic tissue and cell structures
Infectious diseases
Bacterial, viral, and parasitic infections
Neurology
Brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerve disorders
Obstetrics
Pregnancy complications and abnormal fetal positions
Oncology
Cancer types, benign and malignant tumors
Ophthalmology
Conditions affecting the eyes and vision
Orthopedics
Bone, joint, and soft tissue disorders
Otorhinolaryngology
Ear, nose, and throat diseases
Pediatrics
Child health, development, and clinical conditions
Physiology
Biological processes within organs and systems
Pulmonology
Lung and respiratory tract diseases
Traumatology
Acute injuries and musculoskeletal trauma
Urology
Urinary tract and male reproductive disorders
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Search the VOKA Wiki medical dictionary for clear, expert-reviewed explanations of medical terms and abbreviations.
Glasgow Coma Scale (named after the University of Glasgow in Scotland, where it was developed in 1974) is a standardized medical scoring system intended for the objective, rapid, and reproducible assessment of consciousness level in patients with traumatic brain injuries.
A person’s level of consciousness depends on the coordinated work of the cerebral cortex and the brainstem’s activating system. In severe trauma, brain tissue swelling, or growing hematoma, these structures are compressed or experience oxygen deprivation, which consistently leads to impaired alertness.
The scale does not evaluate the cause of the coma, it mathematically measures the depth of neurological deficit. Assessment is based on testing three fundamental responses of the nervous system: eye-opening (as a response to sound or pain), verbal response (the ability to speak and be oriented), and motor response (the ability to follow commands or withdraw a hand from a painful stimulus).
Each reaction is assigned a specific score. The total score ranges from 3 points (terminal coma or brain death, complete absence of any reactions) to 15 points (clear consciousness, patient fully adequate).
This tool revolutionized neurotraumatology by enabling emergency medical personnel, resuscitators, and neurosurgeons to speak a common language. The scale determines rescue tactics. Thus, a score of 8 or below is the absolute world standard for the immediate initiation of mechanical ventilation (intubation) as the brain loses its ability to independently protect the airways at this level.
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