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1.
L Bostr?m  B Nilsson 《Acta chirurgica》2001,167(11):810-815
OBJECTIVES: To report the incidence, range of injury, medical consequences, and mortality of pedestrians in collisions with motor vehicles in Sweden. DESIGN: Retrospective case study. SETTING: The Swedish Hospital Discharge Register (SHDR). SUBJECTS: 8684 pedestrians in collisions with motor vehicles had a total of 12,036 episodes treated in Swedish hospitals from 1987-1994. INTERVENTIONS: Statistical analysis of the Register. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Incidence of pedestrians in collisions with motor vehicles in Sweden, mortality, range of injuries, and medical consequences. RESULTS: From 1987 to the end of 1994, a total of 8684 pedestrians were admitted to Swedish hospitals after collisions with motor vehicles. A mean of 17.6 persons were admitted/100,000 population/year. In all there were 12,036 admissions of injured pedestrians. There were 4593 men (53%) and 4091 women (47%), with a median age of 47 (range 1-100) years. The annual incidence of injured pedestrians (both men and women) decreased significantly during this period. Injuries to the extremities were commonest (39% fractures), followed by injuries to the head and neck (34%). The total number of deaths in our series of patients was 444 (5%). Of these, more than half had head injuries, 22% had fractures, and 5% abdominal or thoracic injuries. CONCLUSION: The number of pedestrians in collisions with motor vehicles is low in Sweden. Injuries to the extremities were commonest, followed by injuries to the head and neck. Old people were most likely to be injured and 5% of the patients treated in hospital died.  相似文献   

2.
STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective study of consecutive patients that were struck by motor vehicles and sustained spinal injuries over a 6-year period from 1997 to 2003. OBJECTIVE: To determine spinal injury patterns and associated injuries in pedestrians struck by motor vehicles. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Motor vehicle accidents involving pedestrians are associated with high morbidity and mortality rates. METHODS: All injured patients admitted to Level I Trauma and Regional Spinal Cord Injury Center were reviewed retrospectively to identify those who were struck by motor vehicles and sustained injury to the spinal column. Before 2001, clearance of the thoracolumbar (TL) spine was performed by plain radiographs. Beginning in 2001, such clearance was performed by helical truncal computed tomography of the chest/abdomen/pelvis (CT/CAP) that was performed to evaluate potential visceral injuries. RESULTS: Of the 1672 patients who were struck by motor vehicles, 135 patients (8%) were found to have spinal injuries. Cervical injuries were found in 35%, thoracic in 19%, lumbar in 37%, and sacral injuries in 27%. Associated injuries were present in 99% of the patients. By relative risk analyses, there were no regional associations between injuries of the TL spine and injuries to the chest and abdomen. Patients frequently had combinations of injuries in distant locations, presumably from a "double-impact" injury mechanism. Before initiation of the CT/CAP protocol to clear the TL spine, 7% of patients had injuries initially missed by TL radiographs. CONCLUSIONS: Spinal injuries in pedestrians struck by motor vehicles are more evenly distributed throughout the spinal column and more often coexist with injuries to remote organs compared with car occupants and motorcyclists where regional tendencies and isolated spinal injuries are more frequent. A systematic approach to both diagnosis and treatment is, therefore, necessary. Helical truncal CT, performed to evaluate visceral injury, effectively screens for TL fractures.  相似文献   

3.
Risk factors predicting operable intracranial hematomas in head injury.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A study was performed to examine the incidence of operable traumatic intracranial hematomas accompanying head injuries of differing degrees of severity, and to see if factors predicting operable mass lesions could be identified. Logistic analysis was used to identify independent predictors of operable traumatic intracranial hematomas. Data were gathered prospectively on 1039 patients admitted with head injury between January, 1986, and December, 1990. Patient age, Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score, pupillary inequality, and injury by falling were all independent predictors of the presence of operable intracranial hematomas (p = 0.0000, 0.0000, 0.0182, and 0.0001, respectively). Injury to vehicle occupants was less likely to result in operable mass lesions (p = 0.0001) than injury by other means. The incidence of traumatic intracranial hematomas in patients over 50 years old was three to four times higher than in those under 30 years of age. Not surprisingly, the incidence of operable hematomas increased with decreasing GCS scores. However, even at a GCS score of 13 to 15, patients with other risk factors had a substantial incidence of operable mass lesions. There was a 29% incidence of operable intracranial hematomas for patients with a GCS score of 13 to 15, aged over 40 years and injured in a fall. It is suggested that patients who are middle-aged or older, or those injured in falls, are at particular risk for traumatic intracranial hematomas even if their GCS score is high. These patients should have early definitive investigation with computerized tomography in order to identify operable hematomas and to initiate surgical treatment prior to neurological deterioration from mass effect.  相似文献   

4.
Motor vehicle deaths in Hong Kong: opportunities for improvement   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
OBJECTIVE: This study was undertaken to describe the epidemiology of motor vehicle mortality in Hong Kong, and to assess its impact on trauma service delivery. SETTING: Hong Kong has an area of 1,072 km2 and a population of 6,800,000. There were 500,000 registered vehicles in 2001. METHODS: All motor vehicle deaths must be reported to the coroner in Hong Kong. A manual retrospective review of all coroner case notes involving motor vehicles for 2001 was performed. RESULTS: The review identified 165 cases involving 111 male and 54 female patients. Elderly cases were predominant, with 37% of the cases involving individuals older than 60 years. Most of the cases involved pedestrians (59%), and half of these pedestrians had experienced collisions with public light buses and trucks. Alcohol was not commonly involved, and when it was, it was isolated to the group 20 to 40 years of age. Most individuals died of major head injury alone or multiple injuries. There were very few major vessel injuries, and these included 13 aortic transections. DISCUSSION: Hong Kong has a very low motor vehicle death rate relative to its population (2.4 per 100,000), but the rate is less impressive when it is related to motor vehicle registrations (33 per 100,000 vehicles). The low incidence of motor vehicle trauma has implications for trauma service delivery in terms of trauma expertise and specialization. Despite the low incidence of trauma, there still are opportunities for prevention, especially in relation to elderly pedestrians and public light buses.  相似文献   

5.
BACKGROUND: In a prospective study, three research groups at Hannover (H) and Munich (M) in Germany and Glasgow (G) in the United Kingdom collected data from motorcycle crashes between July 1996 and July 1998 to investigate head injury mechanisms in helmet-protected motorcyclists. METHODS: The head lesions of motorcyclists with Abbreviated Injury Score-Head (AISHead) 2+ injuries and/or helmet impact were classified into direct force effect (DFE) and indirect force effect (IFE) lesions. The effecting forces and the force consequences were analyzed in detail. RESULTS: Two-hundred twenty-six motorcyclists (H, n = 115; M, n = 56; and G, n = 55) were included. Collision opponents were cars (57.8%), trucks (8.0%), pedestrians (2.3%), bicycles (1.4%), two-wheel motor vehicles (0.8%), and others (4.2%). In 25.4% no other moving object was involved. The mean impact speed was 55 km/h (range, 0-120 km/h) and correlated with AISHead. Seventy-six (33%) motorcyclists had no head injury, 21% (n = 48) AISHead 1, and 46% (n = 103) AISHead 2+. Four hundred nine head lesions were further classified: 36.9% DFE and 63.1% IFE. Lesions included 20.5% bone, 51.3% brain, and 28.1% skin. The most frequent brain lesions were subdural hematomas (22.4%, n = 47) and subarachnoid hematomas (25.2%, n = 53). Lesions of skin or bone were mainly DFE lesions, whereas brain lesions were mostly IFE lesions. CONCLUSION: A modification of the design of the helmet shell may have a preventative effect on DFE lesions, which are caused by a high amount of direct force transfer. Acceleration or deceleration forces induce IFE lesions, particularly rotation, which is an important and underestimated factor. The reduction of the effecting forces and the kinetic consequences should be a goal for future motorcycle helmet generations.  相似文献   

6.
The aim of the study was to examine the predictive value of CT for severe intracranial lesions of mild (GCS 15-13) and moderate (12-9) head injuries. Further,we examined the possibility of predicting these lesions by various variables/factors. Data were collected prospectively from the trauma registry of the DGU (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Unfallchirurgie). Patients with a GCS score from 15-13 and from 12-9 were included in this study and examined for intracranial lesions (AIS(head) 3-6). Over a time period from 1993 to 1999, 1778 patients with mild head injury and 235 patients with moderate head injury were analyzed. Severe intracranial lesions were suffered by 18.6% of the patients with mild head injury and 50.4% of the patients with moderate head injuries. Of the predictive variables, heart rate,patients' age,and primary assessment by the emergency physician showed a strong correlation with the later observed intracranial lesions. In conclusion: (1) independently of the initially good GCS, a high percentage of patients suffered from severe intracranial lesions and (2) besides the GCS only the patients'age and primary assessment by the emergency physician were useful for identifying patients at risk for an intracranial lesion.  相似文献   

7.
Of 215 patients with severe head injuries, 33 (15%) closed head injury patients who talked before their conditions deteriorated to a Glasgow coma scale score of 8 or less were identified. Of this select group, 15 died (45%), but none of the remaining were left in a vegetative state and 14 patients had a "favorable" outcome (42%). Twenty-five patients (76%) underwent surgical decompression. In these 25 patients, 14 subdural hematomas, 4 epidural hematomas, and 7 intracerebral contusions and hematomas were the initial surgical lesions. Twenty of the 25 patients were operated on within 4 hours (16 within 2 hours) of their neurological deterioration. Eleven of the 25 surgically treated died, for a mortality rate of 44%. All 15 deaths were studied further. Autopsies with examination of the brain were performed in 13 patients. Five patients died with severe brain injuries not complicated by iatrogenic factors, and 4 patients died of severe associated injuries. Iatrogenic factors significantly complicated the deaths of 6 patients (40%). It is concluded that most patients who "talk and deteriorate" have sustained very serious life-threatening injuries. Intracranial hematomas are the most frequent cause of this situation, and rapid diagnosis and decompression is the most important factor in salvaging these patients.  相似文献   

8.
The clinical course of ten cases of head injury complicated with multiple systemic injuries were studied by comparing two groups divided according to the presence or absence of associated coagulative-fibrinolytic abnormality. All these cases had intracranial hemorrhagic lesions proven by the high density area in the initial CT scan. Five cases showed signs of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) as evidenced by decreased counts of platelet, and/or elevated value of FDP at the time of admission. Four cases out of these five were in a state of hemorrhagic shock. All these five cases showed a subsequent enlargement of intracranial hematoma. Four cases died. Two of them, who had low initial Glasgow Coma Scale (G.C.S) died of uncontrollable increase of intracranial pressure. The other two, who had high initial G.C.S., died of acute renal failure and multiple organ failure. In contrast with these cases, five cases without signs of DIC intracranial hematomas did not enlarge in spite of the similar neurological conditions to the former group. In head injured patients with systemic injury, DIC frequently causes secondary hemorrhage in the intracranial lesions of minor severity.  相似文献   

9.
We review 79 patients over 65 years old among 715 patients who underwent CT scans in the early period after head injuries, to study the characteristics of head injury in the aged. Among 79 aged patients, 24 developed posttraumatic subdural fluid collections, and in 13 of them chronic subdural hematomas developed subsequently. There were only three acute epidural hematomas. However, a high incidence of intracerebral lesions was noted, regardless of the presence of skull fracture. The pedestrian accident was the most frequent cause of head injury in the 36 aged patients admitted and the mortality rate of traffic accident in the aged was also highest. The relationship between Glasgow Coma Scale Score (GCS) on admission and the outcome was not parallel in the aged, because high GCS not rarely resulted in poor condition or death. Head injury is apt to occur and becomes severe in the aged pedestrian because of advancing carelessness and dull movements with age. The vulnerability of the brain to the injury and changes of intracranial environment in the aged tend to cause intracranial lesions much more than in the younger patients. Already-existing diseases and/or posttraumatic general complications also make clinical courses worse in the aged. It seems important for the improvement of the treatment that the characteristics described above are always taken into consideration throughout the period of the treatment in the aged, in order to eliminate worsening factors adequately. In addition, the social measures to cope with the suffering of the aged pedestrians from traffic accident should be considered and established in an aging society.  相似文献   

10.
The authors studied the incidence of postoperative intracranial hematoma to improve care after intracranial surgery. Five years (1995-1999) of surgical records were analyzed retrospectively. Patients were included if evacuation of an intracranial postoperative hematoma was reported. A control group was randomly selected. Forty-nine patients (0.8%) had postoperative hematomas requiring evacuation. The amount of intraoperative blood loss was significantly larger in the hematoma group (762 +/-735 mL [median 500 mL]) than in the control group (415 +/-403 mL; median 300 mL) (P = 0.004). Clinical deterioration occurred within the first 24 hours in 80%, within 6 hours in 51%, and within 1 hour in 12% of the patients. Those who deteriorated within 24 hours had a faster and more life-threatening deterioration than those who had a hematoma after 24 hours. A decreased level of consciousness was found in 61% and increased focal neurologic signs were found in 33% of the patients. An elevated intracranial pressure was seen significantly more often in the hematoma group (9/10 patients, 90%) than in the control group (1/8 patients, 12.5%) (P = 0.001). In this study, a large amount of intraoperative blood loss and elevated intracranial pressure were warning signs of postoperative hematoma and should alert the clinician to the increased risk. Most hematomas occurred within 24 hours after surgery, and in this time period the deterioration was more severe compared with the hematomas that occurred later.  相似文献   

11.
Decompressive surgery or craniectomy (DC) is a treatment option, which should be considered when the intracranial pressure (ICP) cannot be treated by conservative methods. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the benefits of decompressive craniectomy in patients with intractable posttraumatic intracranial hypertension and to evaluate the patient selection criteria for this management protocol. In this study, 100 patients with severe head injuries were involved. All patients were treated according to the European Brain Injury Consortium (EBIC) guidelines for severe head injuries and were assessed based on individual initial Glasgow Coma Scores (GCS), age, Glasgow Outcome Score (GOS), presence of systemic injury, changes in ICP, presence of mass lesion and the right timing for DC. All patients presented with a GCS of 8 or below. Based on their initial GCS, the patients were divided in two groups of 60 (group I with GCS 4-5) and 40 (group II with GCS 6-8) in each, respectively. Prognosis was evaluated according to the (GOS). After treatment with DC, 84 of the patients (84%) showed unfavorable and 16 (16%) showed favorable outcomes. In group I, 58 patients (96.6%) showed unfavorable and two (3.4%) showed favorable outcomes. In group II, 26 (65%) patients showed unfavorable and 14 (25%) showed favorable outcomes. The importance of initial GCS and age in patient outcomes were statistically significant. The presence of systemic injuries or mass lesions in outcomes were not statistically significant. Based on our findings, we conclude that patients with Glasgow Coma Scores of 6-8 are the best candidates for DC treatment.  相似文献   

12.
Objective: To analyze the crash and injury data in forensic medicine for years of 2004-2007. Methods: A sample of over 567 accident cases (9 pedestrians, 116 bicyclists, and 442 motor vehicle occupants) was considered from the Department of Foren-sic Medicine, Shahid Bahonar University of Kerman, in-volving drivers of all ages and covering a four-year period.Results: The male fatality rates were significantly higher than female ones. The groups at 15-30 years old and at 30-55 years old had the first and second highest numbers of deaths (40% and 34%, respectively). There were sub-stantial differences in distribution of injuries in motor ve-hicle occupants and pedestrians and bicyclists. Among motor vehicle occupants, there were more head injuries, such as skull fracture, brain contusion, subdural haemorrhage, and epidural haemorrhage. Nearly 77% of fatalities occurred during 08:00-22:00 in Sirjan. Internal bleeding was also higher in motor vehicle occupants. Pedestrians and bicyclists also had head injuries frequently.Conclusions: In spite of reduction of road traffic fatali-ties in Sirjan in 2007, it is still one of the cities with high road traffic fatality in the world. These results underline the im-portance of preventive strategies in transportation, sug-gesting that different methods are necessary to reduce fa-talities of various traffic participants.  相似文献   

13.
Moderate head injury: a guide to initial management.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The purpose of this study is to determine the initial treatment of patients who appear to have sustained moderate head injuries when first evaluated. The authors reviewed the records of 341 patients whose initial Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores ranged from 9 to 12, as well as another 106 patients with GCS scores of 13. All patients underwent cranial computerized tomography (CT) at the time of admission. In 40.3% of these patients the CT scans were abnormal (30.6% had intracranial lesions), and 8.1% required neurosurgical intervention (craniotomies for hematoma in 12, elevation of depressed fractures in five, and insertion of intracranial pressure monitors in 19). Four patients died of their intracranial injuries. A similar incidence of lesions found on CT and at surgery suggests that an initial GCS score of 13 be classified with the moderate head injury group. Skull fractures were found to be poor indicators of intracranial abnormalities. These results suggest that all patients with head injury thought to be moderate on initial examination be admitted to the hospital and undergo urgent CT scanning. Patients with intracranial lesions require immediate neurosurgical consultation, surgery as needed, and admission to a critical-care unit. Scans should be repeated in patients whose recovery is less rapid than expected and in all patients with evidence of clinical deterioration; this was necessary in almost half of the patients in this group, and 32% were found to have progression of radiological abnormalities on serial CT scans.  相似文献   

14.
A prospective double-blind study of the effects of dexamethasone administration on the outcome of patients with severe head injuries was performed. Patients were stratified for severity of neurological injury and were treated with placebo, low-dose dexamethasone (16 mg/day), or high-dose dexamethasone (96 mg/day) for a period of 6 days. Outcome was evaluated at 6 months following injury. Of the 76 patients available for analysis, a good outcome was achieved in 37% of placebo-treated patients, 44% of low-dose-treated patients, and 29% of high-dose-treated patients. These differences are not statistically significant. Similarly dexamethasone administration had no statistically significant effect on intracranial pressure patterns or serial neurological examinations during hospitalization. Gastrointestinal bleeding occurred in only one patient. Good outcome was associated with age under 10 years, lighter depth of coma on admission, and the preservation of brain-stem reflexes upon admission. A recalculation of data in previous clinical series purporting to show an improvement in outcome as a result of corticosteroid therapy shows no significant difference in outcome when steroid- and placebo-treated patients are compared. In our series, 90% of all deaths were caused by recurrent intracranial hematomas, medical complications, or diffuse brain injuries with parenchymal hemorrhage and tissue disruption -- causes of death which cannot be affected by corticosteroid therapy. The study suggests that dexamethasone in either high or low dosages has no significant effect on morbidity and mortality following severe head injury.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: Links between cervical spine and/or spinal cord injuries and head trauma have not been reported in detail. METHODS: 188 patients with cervical spine and/or spinal cord injury were divided into two groups, i.e., with upper cervical and mid-lower cervical injury, and compared for head injury. RESULTS: Associated head trauma was investigated in 188 patients with cervical spine and/or spinal cord injuries; 35% had moderate or severe injuries. Brain damage was more frequently observed in patients with upper cervical injury than in those with mid to lower cervical injury. Those patients with upper cervical injury appeared to have an elevated risk of suffering skull base fractures, traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage, and contusional hemotoma. CONCLUSIONS: Approximately one third of patients with cervical spine and/or spinal cord injuries had moderate or severe head injuries. Brain damage was more frequently associated with upper cervical injury. Those patients with upper cervical injury are at greater risk of suffering from skull base fractures and severe intracranial hematomas than those with mid to lower cervical injury.  相似文献   

16.
We report 6 cases of crushing head injuries produced by static loading forces, which are defined as those that occur over a longer period of time (> 200 ms) and are applied over a large area. Patients ranged in age from 4 to 53 years. There were five male and one female. The causes of injuries in 5 cases were industrial accidents. In one case, the patient's head was run over by a motor vehicle in a parking lot. Glasgow Coma Scale scores ranged from 3 to 12. Three patients had cerebrospinal fluid otorrhea and rhinorrhea. Computed tomograms showed multiple calvarial and basilar cranial fractures, as well as intracranial hematomas, pneumocephalus and diffuse cerebral swelling. In 4 cases, fatal compressive brain damage occurred. Compression of the skull beyond a certain degree causes damages to the brain itself and the great vessels through cerebral compression. We consider that this damage may contribute to mortality in such injuries.  相似文献   

17.
The clinical findings and computerized tomography (CT) brain scans of 45 patients with supratentorial intracerebral hematomas were evaluated to determine the effect of hematoma location on the clinical course and outcome of the disease. The lesions were frontal in 18 patients, temporal or temporoparietal in 17, and parieto-occipital in 10. No patient with a frontal or parieto-occipital hematoma had clinical signs of transtentorial herniation at admission or subsequently, whereas seven (41%) of those with temporal or temporoparietal lesions had signs of herniation (p less than 0.05); three of these seven patients had an abnormal mental status, ipsilateral anisocoria, and lateralizing motor findings at admission, and four developed these signs within 12 hours after admission, necessitating urgent surgical intervention. The mean volume of the lesions estimated from the CT scans was similar in the three groups (frontal 47 +/- 28 cc; parieto-occipital 53 +/- 26 cc; temporal/temporoparietal 41 +/- 21 cc). None of the six patients with temporal or temporoparietal hematomas smaller than 30 cc had signs of tentorial herniation, compared with seven (64%) of 11 patients with larger hematomas (p less than 0.05); in six of these seven cases, the hematoma was caused by head injury. Patients with a temporal or temporoparietal hematoma had a worse outcome than those in the other two groups, and no patient with signs of tentorial herniation had a good outcome. Patients with temporal or temporoparietal hematomas appear to be at greater risk of brain-stem compression, especially if the lesion is larger than 30 cc and caused by head injury, than are those with hematomas in other sites. In such cases, prompt surgical intervention should be considered.  相似文献   

18.
BACKGROUND: In Norway, most patients with severe head injuries are transported to, and operated in, the neurosurgical unit of the regional university hospital. However, some patients are still occasionally operated on in county central hospitals by orthopedic or general surgeons who do not have neurosurgical expertise. The aim was to analyze this surgical activity outside the neurosurgical units. METHODS: Data were collected from two sources: a nation-wide survey and the records of all patients with a severe head injury occurring within Vestfold county (1987-1996). RESULTS: The Norwegian county central hospitals perform each only 2.5 to 3 surgical evacuations of intracranial hematomas per year. In Vestfold county, a total of 161 patients were hospitalized alive with an acute severe head injury. One third of the patients (54 patients) underwent decompressive surgery, mostly evacuations of intracranial hematomas. The patients operated on in the central hospital had a significantly worse outcome than the patients who were transferred to and operated on in the neurosurgical unit of the regional hospital. Only patients with extracerebral hematomas were operated on in the central hospital. Patients with an extradural (epidural) hematoma had a better outcome than patients with an acute subdural hematoma. Based on the surgery records and preoperative and postoperative computed tomographic scans, one third of the operations (10 operations) in the central hospital were classified retrospectively as inadequate, because the hematoma was not evacuated or found or because the surgeons did not achieve control of the perioperative bleeding. The overall mortality rate was 29.8%. CONCLUSION: The present study indicates that, in Norway and countries with a similar hospital system, it must be difficult for general and orthopedic surgeons to achieve and maintain the skills required for emergency operations in patients with acute severe head injuries. Thus, it is probably to the patients' benefit to improve the general hospitals' competency and speed in the detection of candidates for surgical decompression, and stress the importance of these patients being transferred without unnecessary delay to a neurosurgical unit.  相似文献   

19.
HYPOTHESIS: This study was undertaken to identify mechanisms of injury, diagnostic modalities, surgical management, and outcome in children with traumatic aortic disruptions. DESIGN: Retrospective study. SETTING: University-affiliated private hospital. PATIENTS: All patients younger than 17 years listed in the trauma registry. INTERVENTION: Operative repair of thoracic aortic injuries. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: There were 8 boys and 3 girls ranging in age from 12 to 17 years (mean, 14.8 years). Seven children were motor vehicle passengers; 3 were pedestrians struck by vehicles; and 1 was thrown from a bull. Aortic injuries were suspected on the basis of the mechanism of injury and abnormal chest x-ray films (mediastinal widening). Aortic injuries were confirmed in 9 patients by arch aortography and in 2 patients by computed tomography. The injuries involved the isthmus of the aorta in 9 patients (complete transections) and the aortic arch in 2 patients (avulsions of the great vessels). Isthmus injuries were repaired by means of left heart bypass with direct cannulation of the distal thoracic aorta in 8 patients and femoral venous to femoral arterial bypass in 1 patient. Arch injuries were repaired during hypothermic circulatory arrest. The injured aortic segments were replaced with interposition grafts. There were no direct complications of anticoagulation. Ten patients (91%) survived. The only death was caused by a severe closed head injury. There were no instances of paraplegia related to aortic repairs. CONCLUSION: Good outcomes resulted from early diagnosis based on mechanism of injury, prompt aortography, and computed tomography and operative management that included distal aortic perfusion with left heart bypass.  相似文献   

20.
The objective of this study was to evaluate the age distribution, mode of injury, type of hematomas, and their surgical outcome in patients with bilateral traumatic head injuries. The present study included 669 cases of traumatic head injury who presented at the neurosurgery emergency out of which 94 cases had bilateral head injuries from the period of August 2009 to April 2014. The data from the hospital computerized database were retrospectively analysed. Cases of bilateral traumatic head injury included 94 patients out of which 88.29 % (n?=?83) were males and 11.70 % (n?=?11) were females. Commonest mode of injury was road traffic accident in 56.38 % (n?=?53) followed by fall from height in 29.78 % (n?=?28). In our study, 25.53 % patients had epidural hematoma (EDH) with intracerebral hematoma (ICH) or contusion (n?=?24), followed by EDH with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) in 18.08 % (n?=?17). At the time of discharge, all those patients managed conservatively had good Glasgow outcome scale (GOS) while with surgical intervention 58 % patients had good GOS, 19 % had moderate disability, and 9 % remained with severe disability. In cases of bilateral hematomas, EDH is most common and should be managed in neurosurgical emergency. Other combinations of bilateral intracranial hematomas should be managed according to the surgical indication and serial CT imaging.  相似文献   

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