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1.
Eleven cases of bilateral extradural haematomas were encountered in a total of 49 cases of extradural haematoma during a period of 4 years among 1000 consecutive cases of acute head injury. Assault was held responsible for 60 per cent of the total head injuries. Most of the patients were seen late; 8 were already unconscious and 5 had dilated fixed pupils. All 11 patients died, 4 soon after admission. Nine cases were found to have associated brain damage at autopsy. In 2 cases bilateral extradural haematomas with compression of the brain were the only intracranial abnormalities. In 4 cases a clost was missed on conventional exploration.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Sixty-two children with traumatic extradural haematomas are considered. According to the clinical history presented—often atypical— and to the grade of neurological impairment, patients have been divided into different clinical groups. Nearly 50% of patients sustained a minor injury, and 26% did not lose consciousness after trauma. Twenty-four per cent of patients did not show fractures on skull X-rays. Atypical location of the haematoma was noted in 22 cases, mainly in the anterior fossa (19 cases).Sixty patients were operated on, while two patients were conservatively treated, owing to the limited size of the haematomas and to the absence of neurological deficits. Associated brain lesions were discovered at surgery in 40% of cases.The overall mortality rate has been 17%, the operative mortality rate 14%. The morbidity rate has been 6%, with 3% of patients presenting severe disability. Morbidity and mortality have been shown to be affected by age—with better prognosis in patients under 10 years of age, by the clinical history presented, by the preoperative conditions, and, mainly, by the presence of associated brain lesions. As regards location, frontal haematomas have shown a better prognosis and a slower course than convexity haematomas. Finally, prognosis of extradural haematomas in children has improved to some extent in the last years with the advent of the CT scan, possibly due to speed and accuracy of diagnosis.  相似文献   

3.
From January to June 1986, 158 patients with extradural haematoma were admitted to our neurosurgical unit. They were divided into four groups, reflecting their clinical features: A. 46 cases (GCS less than or equal to 12) in whom a condition of coma/stupor had occurred at the time of injury and persisted to the time of surgical decompression; B. 41 cases showing deterioration of consciousness (GCS less than or equal to 12) after a lucid interval; C. 46 cases of 'asymptomatic' patients (GCS consistently greater than or equal to 13, no neurological deficits, no signs of increased intracranial pressure); D. 25 cases arriving at our unit in a conscious state, but restless and/or with neurological deficits. The location of the haematoma (temporal in only 35%), the incidence of associated lesions such as cerebral lacerations and/or subdural effusion (30.3%), and the age of the patients (28.4 +/- 18.4 years were similar in the four groups. The size of the haematoma and the displacement of the midline structures were significantly greater in comatose/stuporose patients (groups A and B). The overall mortality was 12% (19 patients), with a morbidity of 14% (22 patients). Factors statistically significant in determining mortality and morbidity were: degree of coma as assessed by GCS; displacement of midline structures: age of the patient; size of the haematoma. There was no mortality or morbidity in those patients who remained conscious (groups C and D). A pronounced increase in the number of CT examinations performed in patients with head injury in our area of referral has caused profound changes in the population of patients admitted to our centre, resulting in a greater proportion of extradural haematomas detected in patients who are still conscious, and in whom operative mortality and morbidity are negligible. One further therapeutic implication of the increase in the number of patients with EDH admitted while asymptomatic may be the option of conservative management in those patients who remain in a good clinical condition, with haematomas of less than 1 cm in thickness and no displacement of midline structures.  相似文献   

4.
Summary A series of 75 children with traumatic extradural haematomas operated on at our Department between 1982 and 1988 were analysed in detail. The overall mortality rate was 17%. CT scan constituted a valuable tool for an early and correct diagnosis, and the mortality rate declined to 9% in the post-CT era. The outcome was found to be predominantly affected by the preoperative neurological status, by the duration of the time interval between onset of coma and surgical intervention, and mainly by the presence of associated brain lesions.  相似文献   

5.
Diffuse Axonal Injury after severe head trauma   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Summary Diffuse Axonal Injury (DAI) is a well known entity that affects many patients with severe head trauma. Classically DAI has been considered the pathological substrate of those cases rendered unconscious at the moment of impact and in which the CT scan does not show mass lesions. Diffuse axonal damage is almost always related to mechanisms of injury in which the rotational acceleration produces shear and tensile strains of high magnitude. In this paper we present a group of 24 patients with a severe head injury in whom the postmortem examination demonstrated unequivocal signs of DAI.Widespread axonal retraction balls, located preferentially in the centrum semiovale and internal capsule were the most constant histological finding. We divided the entire series into two subgroups. One group (15 cases), included all the patients in whom the CT scan did not demonstrate mass lesions. In the second group (9 patients) we considered patients with a diffuse axonal injury in whom the CT scan additionally demonstrated a mass lesion (6 acute subdural haematomas, 2 intracerebral and 1 extradural haematoma). The mean age of the entire group was 26 years.Twenty two patients were injured in a road traffic accident, the remaining two fell from a considerable height. All were rendered immediately unconscious on impact. Diffuse brain damage is a common finding in patients with a severe head injury and immediate coma in whom the CT scan does not show mass lesions. Diffuse axonal injury can also appear in connection with a wide spectrum of focal lesions (acute subdural haematoma, basal ganglia haematoma etc.). Associated shear injuries of the brain in this latter group, could justify the poor outcome that certain groups of patients had in spite of the rapid surgical treatment and aggressive control of intracranial pressure.  相似文献   

6.
Four cases of acute or subacute subdural hygromas in the posterior fossa were reported. All showed suboccipital skull fractures radiologically. Two cases of acute subdural hygromas were encounteded during the fiscal year from 1972 to 1973 at Toritsu Toshima Hospital. In the same period 254 patients with head injuries were admitted here and 106 demonstrated skull fractures. Among these 24 exhibited fractures in the suboccipital region. Among these 24 cases 8 showed signs and symptoms of space-occupying lesions in the posterior fossa and were confirmed later surgically (7 cases) or by autopsy (1 case), namely; three extradural hematomas, two acute subdural hygromas as mentioned above, three subdural hematomas with cerebellar contusions. Preoperative courses in these three acute subdural hygomas as well as three subdural hematomas were summarized as follows:lucid interval was followed by severe nuchal pain and rapid downhill course and finally by coma and panea. Retrograde brachial angiographies were performed in cases. The findings were not contributary to locate mass lesions, in three cases, partly because of delayed or faint filling of vessels caused by compression with hematoma or acute subdural hygroma. In short, differential diagnosis between subdural hematoma and subdural hygroma was difficult preoperating. Postoperatively, courses of subdural hematomas were poor or even fatal. On the contrary, patients of acute subdural hygromas showed rapid clinical improvement after evacuation of xanthochromic fluid. The authors stressed that suboccipital craniectomy should be performed as soon as possible to the patients with sugoccipital fractures when vital signs became progressively worse even if little findings were obtained by carotid angiographies. Subdural hygromas in the posterior fossa may have been present in those fatal cases where autopsy finds neither contusion nor hemorrhage but only brain edema or swelling.  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.
In various series reported in the literature on the operative management of severe head injuries with compound depressed skull fractures and penetrating wounds of the brain, the rates of infection differ from 1 to 17%. In this paper the operative experience with 22 cases of penetrating head injuries is discussed. In conventional operative therapy, depressed skull fracture and lacerated dura were covered by "Sulmycin Implant" containing Gentamycin as a helpful bacteriological barrier. 18 patients survived, 7 patients had severe neurological defects, 5 patients had mild neurological deficits and 6 patients recovered completely. There were no signs of suppurative complications in superficial wounds or in the brain. 4 patients died due to their severe brain damage with multiple contusional lesions. Postoperative complications were as follows: one patient suffered extradural and one patient subdural rebleeding. Another patient with a frontal base skull fracture suffered a pneumatocele because the fracture was not correctly covered. The revision was done successfully using the "Sulmycin Implant". Presently, however, the intradural use of "Sulmycin Implant" is not recommended without further testing for the level of gentamycin in the cerebrospinal fluid which is released by the "Sulmycin Implant".  相似文献   

9.
181 subdural haematomas were subjected to surgery within a period of 3 years. Basing on the dynamics of their course and on their prognosis, we can differentiate between acute (50.8%, interval up to 24 hours), sub-acute (10.5%, interval 2 to 10 days) and chronic types (38.7%, interval 11 days to 6 months). Acute subdural haematomas are due to severe traumas, mostly combined with skull fractures; in most cases, there is no free interval, and they are associated with severe disturbances of consciousness. Their prognosis is poor (mortality 7.2%) and less due to a space-occupying growth, namely the haematoma, than to the primarily traumatic cerebral lesion. Sub-acute subdural haematomas are often characterized by a free interval; the disturbances of consciousness are less severe, and their prognosis is much more favourable (mortality 26.3%). Chronic subdural haematomas are the sequels of milder traumas, but it is clinically impossible to distinguish them from pachymeningiosis haemorrhagica interna. They become manifest by mental changes, headache and neurological focal symptoms. If treated in time, their prognosis is favourable, the mortality being 10%. All types of subdural haematoma present a characteristic clinical pattern. Atypical courses are much rare than with the epidural haematomas. Preoperative classification with assessment of prognosis can be achieved via findings obtained by computed tomography and angiography of the carotid artery.  相似文献   

10.
A prospective study of 100 consecutive patients with basal skull fracture admitted to the University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur between July 1986 and October 1988 was carried out to study its epidemiological pattern, clinical and radiological presentations, mechanisms of injury, time interval between accidents and neurosurgical referrals, complications and outcomes. Two-thirds of the patients were between 20 and 50 years old and 79% were male. Half of the injured were motorcyclists and 22% were pedestrians. Three-quarters of the patients were seen within an hour after injury. Thirty-two patients had intracranial haematomas: 14 subdural, 9 extradural and 9 intracerebral. Three patients developed meningitis (two after operations) and six developed epilepsy. Eighteen patients died, but good recovery resulted in 70 patients at follow-up of 1 to 28 months. A small subgroup of 15 patients with severe ear and nose bleeding as a result of basal venous sinus tear died within a few hours despite aggressive resuscitation, probably due to underlying severe brain stem injury. The implication of the high incidence of basal skull fractures in motorcyclists, despite the enforcement of crash helmets is discussed, with possible mechanisms proposed.  相似文献   

11.
Summary This is a review of 1,000 consecutive cases of severe head injury admitted to our Neurosurgical Department between January 1973 and August 1976, before the advent of CT scanning. All patients were comatose following head injury (GCS8) and were treated homogeneously by the same neurosurgical team by a protocol that included immediate resuscitation on arrival, diagnosis of intracranial lesions by angiography, early surgery when needed, mechanical ventilation, steroids, and mannitol. Extracranial lesions, even if preponderant, were treated by various specialists in the Neurosurgical Department, which for all practical purposes operated as an Emergency Department. Admission criteria were very broad with no preadmission selection. The overall mortality for this series was 45%. A little less than half the patients made good recoveries or remained moderately disabled (47%); 6% were severely disabled, and 2% survived in a persistent vegetative state. More than two-thirds of the patients were brought to our Neurosurgical Department after a short stay at a general hospital; 72% were admitted within 6 hours of injury; 71% were traffic accident victims; and 34% had significant associated extracranial injuries. Carotid angiography was performed in 78% of the patients and indicated the presence of an intracranial haematoma requiring surgery in 36% of the whole series. Mortality was significantly higher in operated than in unoperated patients (56% versus 39%); those treated surgically, however, were older, in worse clinical condition, and showed a higher incidence of acute subdural haematomas associated with brain contusion. Carotid angiography proved very effective in revealing the presence of an expansive lesion but failed to reflect the severity of brain damage, since the group with negative angiograms showed a high mortality (52%). Patients with a lucid interval had a higher percentage of surgical lesions than those with immediate coma (58% versus 26%); but fully 42% of them did not require surgery, and 25% had negative angiograms. From the prognostic point of view the clinical data elicited after initial resuscitation were highly predictive of the outcome: some individual neurological signs, such as mydriasis, posturing and eye movements, were not inferior to the GCS score in that respect. Age also proved a strong predictor, since elderly patients are more likely to have severe subdural and parenchymal lesions and their clinical severity is accordingly greater.Our series amounts to a data bank of cases both contemporary to and in good agreement with that collected by Jennett and his associates in their 1977 multinational study; and it affords a useful reference in the assessment of epidemiological variations and alternative management in relation to outcome.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Comparative studies of the blink reflex in a series of head injuries through the stages of coma and recovery from coma in a series of miscellaneous hemispheral lesions, and in a normal series, reveals that, although the principal centre for the R1 component of the blink reflex seems to be localised in the upper pons, the seat of the R2 late component is in the reticular system. The reappearance of this late component of the blink reflex in our cases of coma although seeming to depend on the integrity of the mesencephalic formation, correlates with the recovery of the patient's alertness.On the other hand, habituation of this reflex depends on the integrity of global cognitive function, rather than on any localised centre. The roles of the cortex, selective attention, and emotional factors, are discussed.The recovery of the normal habituation of the blink reflex obtained by glabellar tapping was found to be a useful sign in the follow up of patients recovering from concussion and other lesions, such as subdural haematomas and brain tumours, with global mental impairment.  相似文献   

13.
Sixty-two cases of acute subdural hematoma were clinically analyzed with special reference to such prognostic factors as age, Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score on admission, pupillary signs, decerebration, and initial computed tomography (CT) findings. Intraparenchymal lesions demonstrated by CT were evaluated according to Yamaura's classification. In 19 cases, serum fibrin and fibrinogen degradation products (FDP) were measured at the time of admission. Emergency surgery was performed in 46 cases, and the remaining 16 patients were treated conservatively. The final outcome was judged according to the Glasgow Outcome Scale, and patients were divided into a "good outcome" group (good recovery or moderate disability) and a "poor outcome" group (severe disability, vegetative state, or death). In general, the outcomes proved to be unsatisfactory. Forty-four patients (71%) had a poor outcome, with 32/62 (52%) mortality, and only 18 (29%) had a good outcome. The clinical factors associated with a poor outcome were age over 64 years, a GCS score on admission of less than 7, decerebration, and absence of pupillary reaction to light. Initial CT scans showed brain damage in 46 patients (74%), 39 (85%) of whom had a poor outcome. This indicates that the outcome was significantly related to brain injury complicating the acute subdural hematoma. A high serum FDP level was similarly related to a poor outcome, which suggests that the serum FDP level reflects the degree of both primary and secondary brain injury. Thus, measurement of serum FDP may be valuable both in assessing clinical status and in evaluating the extent of brain injury in acute subdural hematoma.  相似文献   

14.
One hundred and fifty patients with posttraumatic diffuse cerebral lesions were reviewed. Criteria of inclusion were immediate coma and CT appearance of diffuse lesions, that were classified as follows: (a) Diffuse axonal injury (70 cases): patients with normal CT scan (50 cases) and patients with shearing injury (focal hemorrhages in corpus callosum, basal ganglia and brain stem; gliding contusions) (20 cases); (b) Diffuse brain swelling (80 cases): reduced or absent lateral ventricles, absence of 3rd ventricle and basal cisterns. Many of these patients had either subarachnoid haemorrhage or subdural blood effusion. Clinical course and mortality rate were in a ranking order in the considered groups. Patients with normal CT had a less severe coma and a better outcome than patients with shearing injury and diffuse brain swelling. There was evidence of high intracranial pressure in 75% of the patients with brain swelling, whereas no patient with normal CT had ICP elevation. Diffuse axonal injury represents a primary posttraumatic diffuse lesion. Secondary vascular involvement, due to hypoxia, shock and other unknown causes, is responsible for the appearance of vasoparesis, hyperemia and diffuse brain swelling.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Twenty-nine patients with chronic bilateral subdural haematomas were surgically treated during 1966 to 1977. Twenty-four of them (83%) had a history of head injury, which caused unconsciousness in eight cases. The mean interval from trauma to operation was eleven weeks. The mean age of the patients was 60 years. The prevalence of the most commonly encountered symptoms and signs was: headache 72%, mental symptoms 48%, papilloedema 41%, vertigo 31%, nausea 28%, reduced consciousness 28%, walking difficulties 24%, hemiparesis 24%, and paraparesis 14%. The aggregate thickness of haematomas was 34 mm, 36 mm, and 40 mm in age groups of 20–39, 40–59, and over 60 years, respectively. All patients were operated on, four of them only unilaterally. Three patients in the whole series died. Two of them had been operated upon only on one side in the first session, the haematoma of the other side being evacuated 81/2 hours and four days later, respectively. Unilateral operation is likely to cause sever e distortion of the midline structures and the brain stem and thus aggravates the cerebral situation. Therefore the necessity of simultaneous evacuation of the haematomas on both sides is stressed. The reason for the death of the third patient was delay in diagnosis.All three patients who died belonged to the group of eight patients with a reduced level of consciousness before surgery.Twenty-three of the survivors were fully independent in their daily lives, and three needed some help after operative treatment.  相似文献   

16.
The mortality in a series of 155 extradural hæmatomas was 20%. The unavoidable mortality due to coexistent severe cerebral damage was only 5.1%. Delayed diagnosis, due to one of several factors, was the commonest cause of the avoidable deaths. A reliance on burr holes as a means of excluding an extradural hæmorrhage, the failure to detect the presence of coexisting space-occupying lesions, misguided lumbar punctures and postoperative complications contributed in a lesser degree to the high avoidable mortality. This analysis suggests a pattern of treatment for head injuries in general and extradural hæmatomas in particular.  相似文献   

17.
Summary  Chronic subdural haematomas are prone to recollect, increasing the risk of further complications and death. Burr hole evacuation followed by continuous irrigation of a Ringer solution into the remaining subdural cavity, allows remaining blood to be washed out and the brain to re-expand.  This technique was compared with burr hole evacuation either without or with a passive drainage and craniotomy, respectively.  Reformation of haematomas after continuous irrigation occurred in 2,6% (2/77); more than a twelve (32,6%; 15/46) and a nine (23,8%; 5/21) times rate reduction compared to burr hole evacuation without and with passive drainage, respectively. Compared to the craniotomy results, the rate dropped seventeen times (44,4%; 4/9).  Expect from the two rebleedings in 77 haematomas operated on through burr holes followed by irrigation, all patients recovered including nine recurrent haematomas re-operated on by this method.  Recurrent haematomas operated on through burr hole evacuation alone or with insertion of a passive drainage, recollected in 50% (2/4) and 33,3% (2/6). Similar rate after craniotomies was 11,1% (1/9).  Neither infections nor deaths followed burr hole evacuation combined with continuous irrigation, whereas 5,3% (2/38) and 5,9% (1/17) suffered from empyema after burr hole evacuation alone or combined with a passive drainage, respectively. Five (9,1%) of these 55 patients died either from empyemas (three) or rebleedings (two).  Recurrent haematomas evacuated through a craniotomy had no complications from infections.  Compared to other methods, continuous irrigation reduces the need for re-operation significantly by preventing haematoma recurrence and empyema formation. Contrary to other surgical techniques, haematoma recurrence after second time surgery did not occur.  相似文献   

18.
Chronic subdural hematoma: surgical management in 133 patients   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
One hundred and thirty-three patients with chronic subdural hematoma were treated surgically between 1943 and 1980. The patients, aged 5 to 84 years, were graded retrospectively according to the Bender scale; 28% were in Grades 3 and 4. There were 107 unilateral and 26 bilateral hematomas. The clots were removed mostly via burr-holes without drainage. The treatment of 121 patients included an active policy of brain expansion at operation and the postoperative management of intracranial hypotension by lumbar injection. Two patients died, for a mortality rate of 1.5%. The patients who died were 54 and 59 years old, both from among the 26 cases with bilateral lesions; 107 unilateral lesions were treated, with no deaths. None of 51 patients who were aged 61 years and over died. The mean postoperative stay was 17.2 days, and at 3 weeks 77% had been discharged home. Fifteen percent of survivors had permanent disabilities. The common residual deficits were personality and memory disorders, and there was hemiparesis in Grade 4 cases. The high-risk groups of chronic subdural hematoma were those in Grades 3 and 4, bilateral hematomas, and the elderly. These seemed to be benefited by brain inflation and lumbar injections for intracranial hypotension.  相似文献   

19.
This study of 1161 neurotrauma patients in New South Wales hospitals was designed to examine the role of preventable causes of death and disability in cases of spinal injury, extradural, subdural and multiple intracranial haematomas in order to make recommendations for improvements in accident, emergency, ambulance and hospital services. Methods have been developed for standardizing diagnosis in different classes of hospital for the assessment of severity in terms of the patient's age, sex, physical signs, head and spine injuries and other injuries. Estimates have been made of the number of preventable deaths by a case control study of each category of neurotrauma under study.  相似文献   

20.
In has been suggested that monitoring of blood levels of serum proteins could be of value in order to assess the prognosis of trauma patients. A study was set up to assess the value of albuminaemia, prealbuminaemia, transferrin and ceruleoplasmin levels in intensive care unit patients admitted after multiple trauma including head injury. This study involved 43 patients (31 men and 12 women), with a mean age of 26 years (range: 15 and 71 years). Two patients had extradural haematoma. The other patients had brain contusion associated with extradural haematoma (5 cases), subdural haematoma (1 case) and open brain wound (1 case). All these patients were sedated with penthiobarbital, paralysed with pancuronium bromide and mechanically ventilated. Serum protein levels were measured on the first and eighth days of the stay in the intensive care unit. In these patients that survived, there was a significant decrease in albuminaemia and transferrin levels, no change in prealbuminaemia and a significant increase in ceruleoplasmin levels. Ten patients died during the study. They presented a greater decrease in albuminaemia and prealbuminaemia as compared with the survivors. There was no difference in the evolution of ceruleoplasmin and transferrin levels between the two groups. Thus, whilst the difference between survivors and non-survivors was significant for the group, for the individual patient the difference was too small to be of any prognostic value.  相似文献   

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