
Are There Any Alternative Treatments For Encephalomalacia?

No additional treatment needed
Detailed Answer:
Hello XXXX! I read your question carefully and I am sorry about the distress you seem to have been in, hopefully my answer will make you feel better.
I do not know what exactly have you read on the Internet about encephalomalacia. It is a latin word which basically indicates the remnant of an injury to the brain due to loss of some brain matter. Now since you have undergone surgery and it was for an atypical meningeoma (which is not as benign as typical meningeoma so surgery necessitates more extensive removal of tissue), I think this is a finding which is totally expected, frankly I would have been surprised if it wasn't there. So I do not think there is any reason for alarm.
As for what you have to do...you have to do nothing. It is not an active evolving process, it is an old remnant as I said, sort of like an old scar in your brain so to say, it will stay as it is, won't change and won't affect your health, at least not more than it has done till now. It may confer a higher risk for epileptic seizures in the future, but not necessarily, especially if you haven't had any seizures till now.
I remain at your disposal for further questions.


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Detailed Answer:
Hello again.
Brain cells do not replicate so unfortunately there is no drug or other action which can substitute the lost cells. The remaining cells though have a quality called plasticity, meaning they are able to form new connections with each other and assume functions priorly belonging to the lost cells, thus compensating for their loss. Of course the more cells are lost the harder it is to compensate.
But again, whatever damage there is by the loss of those cells, you've already seen the worst of it, from now on it won't worsen, if anything will improve thanks to compensation. So you should focus on how you actually feel and not on an exam, MRIs do not tell us much about plasticity and compensation, it's the actual performance of the patient which does.
As for the functions of the temporal lobe, it is mainly involved in memory, emotions, hearing perception and language (but language mainly for the left one).
I hope to have been of help

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