Head Trauma Flashcards

1
Q

What types of brain injury are there?

A

1) Primary brain injury
- Focal pathology
- Lesions of the scalp, skull and dura, lacerations
- Surface contusions: coup, contrecoup
- Intracranial haematoma: extradural, intradural (SAH, subdural, intracerebral)

  • Diffuse axonal injury (DAI) associated with acceleration-deceleration injuries
  • Secondary brain injury
    • Raised ICP
    • Hypoglycaemia and hyperglycaemia
    • Seizures
    • Hypoxic damage
      • Hypotension
      • Hypoxia and hypercarbia
      • Anaemia
      • Cerebral oedema
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2
Q

Give some examples of symptoms associated with head trauma.

A

Physical symptoms

- Headache
- Vomiting* (continuing vomiting)
- Drowsiness/fatigue* (difficulty waking)
- Bleeding/discharge from ear or nose* 
- Fits/seizures/twitching/convulsions* 
- Blurred/double vision* 
- Poor coordination/clumsiness/weakness* 
- Difficulty swallowing, coughing when eating or drinking* 
- Noise sensitivity 

Behavioural and emotional symptoms

- Irritable/frustrated/mood swings
- Anxiety/fear
- Changed sleep patterns

Cognitive or communication symptoms

- Cognitive fatigue: difficulty concentrating, slower
- Memory problems/confusion/loss of orientation*
- Slurred speech*
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3
Q

Aside from the GCS, what can you use to assess conscious state of a patient?

A
  • AAlert
  • VResponds to voice
  • PResponds to pain - use firm supraorbital pressure/jaw thrust as stimulus
    • Purposefully
    • Non-purposefully
      □ Withdrawal/flexor response
      □ Extensor response
  • UUnresponsive

+ Assess pupil size, equality and reactivity

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4
Q

Secondary survey: what might you look for in the eyes?

A
○ Pupil size
○ Equality
○ Reactivity
○ Fundoscopy for retinal haemorrhage (may indicate non-accidental injury)
○ Dilated non-reactive pupil
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5
Q

What are some signs of a base of skull fracture?

A
  • Raccoon eyes
  • Battle’s sign: bruising behind ear
  • Blood behind ear drum
  • CSF leak - ears, nose
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6
Q

What does a dilated non-reactive pupil indicate?

A

3rd nerve palsy from ipsilateral intracranial haematoma until proven otherwise

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7
Q

What are definite indications for a CT brain and C-spine in head trauma?

A
  • Any sign of basal skull fracture on secondary survey
  • Focal neurological deficit
  • Suspicion of open or depressed skull fracture
  • Unresponsive or only responding non-purposefully to pain
  • GCS persistently < 8
  • Respiratory irregularity/loss of protective laryngeal reflexes
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8
Q

What are relative indications for a CT brain and C-spine in head trauma?

A
  • Loss of consciousness lasting more than 5 minutes (witnessed)
  • Amnesia (antegrade or retrograde) lasting more than 5 minutes
  • Persistent vomiting
  • Clinical suspicion of non-accidental injury
  • Post-traumatic seizures (except a brief ( <2 min) convulsion occurring at time of the impact)
  • GCS persistently less than 14, or for a baby under 1 year GCS (paediatric) persistently less than 15
  • If under 1 year, presence of bruise, swelling or laceration of more than 5 cm on the head
  • Dangerous mechanism of injury
    • high-speed road traffic accident either as pedestrian, cyclist or vehicle occupant,
    • fall from a height.

• Known bleeding tendency

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9
Q

Other than imaging, what are some investigations that are always done for head trauma?

A
  • VBG and blood sugar level (especially in small children and in adolescents who have been drinking alcohol)
  • ECG (query arrhythmia as cause of fall)
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10
Q

Minor head injury:

  • AVPU~GCS?
  • Conscious state
  • Other features
A
  • AVPU ~ GCS 13-15
  • No LOC, stable and alert conscious state
  • Up to one episode of vomiting
  • May have scalp bruising or laceration
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11
Q

Moderate head injury:

  • AVPU~GCS?
  • Conscious state
  • Other features
A
  • AVPU ~ GCS 9-12
  • Brief LOC at time of injury
  • Currently alert or responds to voice
  • May be drowsy
  • Two or more episodes of vomiting
  • Persistent headache
  • Up to one single brief ( <2min) convulsion occurring immediately after the impact
  • May have a large scalp bruise, haematoma or laceration
  • Visual disturbance
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12
Q

Severe head injury:

  • AVPU~GCS?
  • Conscious state
  • Other features
A
  • AVPU ~ GCS 3-8
  • Decreased conscious state – responsive to pain only or unresponsive
  • Localising neurological signs (unequal pupils, lateralising motor weakness)
  • has a second seizure, convulsion or fit, other than a single brief one when the injury happened
  • Signs of increased intracranial pressure
  • Penetrating head injury
  • CSF leak from nose or ears
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13
Q

What are some signs of increased ICP?

A
  • Uncal herniation: Ipsilateral dilated non-reactive pupil due to compression of the oculomotor nerve
  • Central herniation: Brainstem compression causing bradycardia, hypertension and widened pulse pressure (Cushing’s triad)
  • Irregular respirations (Cheynes-Stokes)
  • Decorticate: arms flexed, hands clenched into fists, legs extended, feet turned inward
  • Decerebrate: head arched back, arms extended by the sides, legs extended, feet turned inward
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14
Q

When do you intubate a trauma patient?

A

○ Child unresponsive or not responding purposefully to pain
○ GCS persistently <8
○ Loss of protective laryngeal reflexes
○Respiratory irregularity

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15
Q

What kind of feeding tube should you give a head trauma patient?

A

OGT (NGT to avoid in case it is a base of skull fracture!)

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16
Q

What must you anticipate during intubation?

A

Hypoxia (max pre-oxygenation) and hypotension (don’t give sympatholytics)

17
Q

How do you manage a minor head injury?

A
  • Adequate analgesia, can be discharged from ED
18
Q

How do you manage a moderate head injury?

A
  • Observe for up to 4h with 30mins neuro obs - D/C if back to normal conscious state and no further vomiting
  • Adequate analgesia
  • Can consider anti-emetics, but longer period of obs needed
19
Q

How do you manage a severe head injury?

A
  • Urgent CT brain and c-spine - maintain c-spine immobilisation even if imaging normal
  • Urgent neurosurgical opinion
  • Sufficient analgesia (more sensitive to opioids)
  • Nurse 20-30 degrees head up (after correction of shock) and head in midline position to help venous drainage.
  • Maintain Normothermia
  • Avoid hypo/hyperglycaemia
  • Avoid hyponatraemia(?Hypertonic saline)
  • Control seizure
  • Ventilate to a pCO2 35mmHg 4-4.5 kPa (consider arterial catheter).
  • Ensure adequate blood pressure with crystalloid infusion or inotropes (e.g. noradrenaline) if necessary.
  • Consider mannitol (0.5-1 g/kg over 20-30 min i.v.) or hypertonic saline (NaCl 3% 3 ml/kg over 10-20 min i.v.).
  • Consider phenytoin loading dose (20 mg/kg over 20 min i.v.)