Pathophysiology Flashcards

1
Q

Skull fractures can lead to:

A
  • Brain contusions: bruise of brain tissue
  • Brain lacerations-
  • Traumatic aneurysms:
  • Cranial nerve damage:
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2
Q

Brain Contusions:

A

Bruise of brain tissue

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3
Q

Brain lacerations:

A

associated with a TBI, brain tissue is mechanically cut or torn

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4
Q

Traumatic aneurysms:

A

intracranial aneurysm as a result from a non-penetrating head injury

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5
Q

Cranial nerve damage:

A

a result of specific nerves that are damaged

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6
Q

Depressed fractures:

A

Usually comminuted with broken portions of bone displaced inward may require surgery.

  • decrease volume of the cranial cavity
  • Can produce lower brainstem herniation and vegetative state ( characterized by open eyes and the appearance of wakefulness, PVS- coma, no awareness or wakefulness
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7
Q

PVS:

A

perceptive vegetated state

-coma: no awareness or wakefulness

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8
Q

Tearing of vascular structures producing hematomas:

A

Epidural hematoma
subdural hematoma
intracerebral hematomas
-All types of hematomas occupy space and compress brain tissue: This can can lead to additional brain damage, and herniation which can result in vegetative disturbances (apnea, decrease HR and increase BP

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9
Q

Epidural hematoma:

A

blood accumulates on top of the dura matter

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10
Q

Subdural hematoma

A

Blood accumulates beneath the dura

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11
Q

Intracerebral hematomas:

A

Characterized by the formation of the formation of a blood mass within the brain tissue at the site of contusion

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12
Q

Primary brain damage

A

-Brain is floating in cerebrospinal fluid
-Compression at site of impact tears and bruises nerve fibers (contusion), producing local brain injury
-Areas of the brain most susceptible to injury include the frontal and temporal lobes
~Bony ridges in the skull enhance the likelihood of lacerations and contusions at these sites
~Cognitive, memory and receptive language deficits are common.

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13
Q

Diffuse brain damage or diffuse axonal injury is produced by:

A
  • Compression: waves traveling through the brain

- Twisting & shear forces leading to stretching, snapping, shearing of axons

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14
Q

Coup:

A

Contrecoup injury:

-With severe blow, rebound causes additional injury resulting in polar brain damage.

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15
Q

Secondary brain damage:

A

Insults that evolve over time and are the direct result of events set in motion by the initial injury.

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16
Q

Examples of secondary brain damage:

A
  • Raised intracranial pressure may lead to brain herniation
  • arterial hypoxia and brain ischemia
  • cerebral edema-usually peaks 3-5 days
  • arterial hypotension (blood loss)
  • impaired salt and h2o balance
  • intracranial infection
  • hydrocephalus