What is the deadly disease of cerebral vasculitis?‘
Anisul Haque was scheduled to return to London on a personal visit on July 29. He was supposed to return in August but he never returned. All the mata kati have left everyone in the country of no return.
Mator Anisul Haque was diagnosed with cerebral vasculitis (inflammation of the blood vessels of the brain). When he was sick, he was treated at a hospital in London, he was not diagnosed with this problem at first. He was suffering from brain problems for two months before admission to the hospital, and after the diagnosis, the doctors advised to be fully rested and also forbidding to talk.
Still, he was out of danger and he was hoping to return to his country soon, but his hope was not fulfilled.
Cerebral vasculitis is another name for the central nervous system, vaculitis, and rare disease. It is not usually seen in the blood vessels of the brain. It will damage the blood vessels of the brain and cause obstruction in the bloodstream, which can also cause serious cases of bleeding in the brain, which is often not so common in the first case of this indigenous disease.
Cerebral vasculitis patients may experience neurological problems such as cerebral lesions, feeling weak, feeling lost, headache, skin rash, or skin rash, difficulty moving, and even behavioral problems.