Brain Injury Flashcards

1
Q

Highest risk for TBIs with 0-4 years old

A
  • Large heads compared to rest of body with weak necks/poor motor control so fall a lot
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2
Q

Highest risk for 15-19 year olds

A
  • Body is too strong/mature for their brais (frontal lobe not fully developed)
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3
Q

Highest risk for older adults

A

Falls

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4
Q

Most common causes of TBIS

A
  1. Falls
  2. Unknown/other
  3. MVA
  4. Struck by motor vehicle
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5
Q

Mild brain injury

A
  • GCS >/= 13
  • Known as a concussion
  • Symptoms improve over 1-3 months
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6
Q

Moderate brain injury

A
  • GCS 9-12

- Loss of consciousness followed by few days/weeks of confusion

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7
Q

Severe brain injury

A
  • GCS </=8
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8
Q

Primary brain injuries

A
  1. Skull fracture
  2. Contusions
  3. Hematoma/Hemorrhage
  4. Lacerations
  5. Diffuse axonal injuries
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9
Q

Secondary damage

A
  1. Influx of Ca2+
  2. Efflux of K+
  3. Reduced magnesium related to decreased energy metabolism and correlated with neurological deficits
  4. Rise in oxygen free radicals causing secondary to cell death and damage
    5 .Cerebral edema
  5. Intracranial hematoma
  6. Cerebral hypoxia and ischemia
  7. Brain herniation
  8. Increased intracranial pressure
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10
Q

Evaluation of a Coma

A
  • Eye movements (pupillary light, conjugate eye movement, VOR, Doll’s head, Caloric response)
  • Movement patterns
  • Breathing patterns
  • Glasgow coma scale
  • Coma recovery scale
  • Rancho Los Amigos Levels of Cognitive Function
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11
Q

Cheyne-Stokes

A
  • Periods of hyperventilation alternating with periods of apnea
  • Caused by damage to cortex
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12
Q

Central Neurogenic Hyperventilation

A
  • Continuous, regular, rapid respirations/consistent hyperventilation
  • Damage to midbrain and upper pons
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13
Q

Apneustic Respiration

A
  • Prolonged inspiration with pause before expiration, has period of apnea
  • Caused by damage to lower pons
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14
Q

Ataxia respirations

A
  • Chaotic with irregular phases; normally leads to cessation of breathing
  • Damage to medulla
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15
Q

Glasgow Coma Scale

A
  • Uses eye movement, motor response, and verbalization to score coma
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16
Q

Coma recovery scale

A
  • Identifies different levels of consciousness (coma, vegetative state, persistive vegetative state, minimally conscious state, brain death)
17
Q

Rancho Los Amigos Levels of Cognitive Function

A
  • 8 levels with more detailed descriptions and a more functional scale
18
Q

Consciousness

A
  • Complete and normal content of consciousness depends on many systems (Memory, emotion, drive, language, executive function, arousal systems, sensory processing)
  • Depends on awake and awareness
19
Q

Coma

A
  • A state of unarousable unresponsiveness in which there is no evidence of self-awareness or environmental awareness
  • Not awake or aware
  • Absence of spontaneous eye opening
  • No sleep wake cycles
  • Behavior is limited to reflexive activity indicating failure of reticular activating system and integrated cortical activity
  • Eyes continuously closed
  • Purposeful responses to environmental stimulation cannot be elicited
  • No evidence of discrete localized responses
  • No evidence of language comprehension or expression
20
Q

Vegetative State

A
  • Awake but not aware
  • The recovery of eye opening with continued absence of observable signs of cognitively mediated behavior signals transition to VS
  • AAN 3 diagnostic criteria (all must be met): 1. No evidence of sustained, reproducible purposeful or voluntary behavioral responses to visual, auditory, tactile, or noxious stimuli; 2. No evidence of language comprehension or expression; 3. Intermittent wakefulness manifested by presence of sleep/wake cycles (periodic eye opening)
  • May experience sleep-wake cycles or may be constant state of wakefulness
  • Can exhibit some behaviors that can be seen as partial consciousness: grinding teeth, swallow, smile, crying, grunting, moaning, screaming, orienting behavior
21
Q

Permanent vegetative state v. persistent vegetative state

A

1 year; 4 weeks

22
Q

Minimally conscious state

A
  • Awake with fluctuating awareness
  • Clear and reproducible evidence of one of the four categories: 1. Follow simple commands; 2. Gestures or verbalizes yes/no; 3. Intelligible verbalization; 4. Movement or affective behavior that occur in response to environmental stimulation that are not reflexive (crying, smiling, laughter, gestures, vocalization, reaching for objects, visual pursuit, sustained fixation)
23
Q

Brain death

A
  • No clinical evidence of brain function upon physical examination
  • No response to pain
  • No cranial nerve reflexes
  • No pupillary response (fixed pupils)
  • No oculocephalic reflex (Doll’s Head)
  • No corneal reflex
  • No caloric reflex test
  • No spontaneous respirations
  • Flat EEG (not necessary in US to certify brain death)
  • Confirmed by exam of 2 independent physicians
  • 2 EEG’s, 24 hours apart
  • Must be differentiated from conditions where recovery may be possible
  • Barbiturate intoxication, alcohol intoxication, sedative overdose, hypothermia, hypoglycemia, coma, or chronic vegetative states
  • This will be when patient is on life support and harvest organs
  • Only difference between brain dead and dead is your heart is beating
24
Q

Treatment Guidelines for Reducing Brain Edema

A
  • A more direct approach to monitoring and managing increased intracranial pressure and maintaining steady perfusion of brain tissue
  • Use of intracranial pressure monitors in ventricles
  • Ability to tap off cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) if pressure rises to dangerous levels
  • Normal intracranial pressure (ICP) is 7-10 mmHg
  • If ICP rises above 20 mmHg then shunt is put in place
  • ICP > 25 mmHg is life threatening (above 60 mmHg, uniformly lethal)
  • Maintain BP (systolic BP > 90 mmHg) for adequate perfusion of tissue
  • Cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) maintained > 70 mmHg
  • CPP = mean arterial pressure – ICP
  • MAP = [(2 * diastolic) + systolic]/3
  • Treatment has significant effect on outcome
  • In cases where acute, elevated ICP cannot be lowered sufficiently, hyperventilation, barbiturates, and diuretics may be used judiciously in combination with ICP management
25
Q

Factors of Prognosis (better vs. worse)

A
  • Damage is focal vs. diffuse
  • Damage is superficial vs. deep
  • Damage is unilateral vs. bilateral
  • Score on 24 hour GCS is better than 8
  • Loss of consciousness (LOC) is less than 2 weeks
  • Post-traumatic amnesia (PTA) is less than 2 months
  • Anterograde – how much people can remember since accident
  • There was a lucid interval prior to LOC (less chance of DAI)
  • No secondary injury like brain herniation or ischemia
  • Younger than 40 years old
  • Premorbid psychosocial factors (drug/alcohol free)
26
Q

PTA

A
  • Anterograde episodic amnesia
  • Cannot recall events since trauma
  • Associated with confusional state
  • Length of PTA is a standard measure of severity of injury
  • Length of PTA is correlated with length of LOC