A brain shunt is a long-term device used to drain excess fluid from the brain to another part of the body, relieving pressure caused by fluid buildup.
A shunt is a hollow tube surgically placed in the brain (or occasionally in the spine) to help drain cerebrospinal fluid and redirect it to another location in the body where it can be reabsorbed.
A shunt in the grounded conductor may not detect leakage current that bypasses the shunt, but it will not experience high common-mode voltage to ground. The load is removed from a direct path to ground, which may create problems for control circuitry, result in unwanted emissions, or both.
The shunt procedure is done in a hospital under general anesthesia (meaning you'll be asleep). It may take 30 minutes or a little longer, plus time to wake up from anesthesia.
The most common treatment for hydrocephalus is the surgical placement of a medical device called a shunt that drains the excess fluid from the brain to another part of the body.
A shunt is a medical device or a surgically created passage designed to redirect the flow of a bodily fluid from one area to another. This bypass mechanism is used when the body’s natural pathways for fluid circulation or pressure regulation are blocked or compromised.
A shunt is an artificial connection between blood vessels or body systems. Learn when a shunt is placed, how the procedure works, and what risks are involved.
cardiovascular shunt an abnormality of the blood flow between the sides of the heart or between the systemic and pulmonary circulation; see left-to-right shunt and right-to-left shunt.