Head/Spinal Injuries & Raised ICP Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two main types of traumatic brain injury?

A
Primary - as a result of brain trauma
Secondary - develop later as a result of complications 
   -hypoxia
   -ischaemia
   -haematomas
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2
Q

What are the common types of primary brain injuries?

A

Concussion
Diffuse axonal injury
Focal brain injuries

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3
Q

What is concussion?

A

Transient loss of consciousness w/ no persistent neurological signs
May be signs of neurological injury on CT

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4
Q

What are they key management features of diffuse axonal injury?

A

Visible on high res CT
Does not cause raised ICP
Treatment supportive
Can cause deficiencies in higher funcn

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5
Q

What are focal brain injuries?

A

Gross damage to localised areas of brain, visible on CT

These act as space-occupying lesions

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6
Q

What are the three types of focal brain injury?

A

Coup - beneath site of impact
Contre-coup - on opposite side of brain
Haemorrhage/haematoma

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7
Q

What is post-concussion syndrome?

A

Long term disability affecting 50% of those w/ a head injury

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8
Q

What are the sx of a post-concussion syndrome?

A
Dizziness
Headache
Poor concentration/memory
Inability to work
Difficulties w/ self care
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9
Q

What are the key components of assessing a pt w/ head injury?

A
C-spine precautions
ABCDE resus
Record GCS
Hx/exam
Imaging - CT head, C-spine radiography
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10
Q

What are the key signs of neurological deterioration?

A
Falling GCS (most important size)
Changing pupillary size/responsiveness
Focal neurological signs
Changing resp rate
Cushing's reflex
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11
Q

What is Cushing’s reflex?

A

Late sign of neurological deterioration, due to pressure on medulla
Falling pulse, rising BP

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12
Q

What pupillary changes are signs of neurological deterioration?

A

Initial progressive dilation on side of lesion and sluggish response to light
Due to pressure on oculmotor nn as ICP rises
If bilateral is pre-terminal

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13
Q

What is the effect of hypercapnia in head injury?

A

Cerebral vasodilation
Raises ICP
May need hyperventilation on ICU

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14
Q

What is the effect of hypoxaemia in head injury?

A

Cerebral vasodilation

Rapid lactic acidosis –> cerebral damage

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15
Q

What is the effect of hypotension in head injury?

A

Loss of autoregulation
Cerebral blood flow relies on SBP
Resus vital to maintain SBP

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16
Q

Which pts should have a head CT w/i 1hr of arrival?

A
GCS <13 at any time OR <15 2hrs post injury
Focal neurological deficit
Signs of increasing ICP
Suspected skull fracture
Post-traumatic seizure
Vomiting >1 times
17
Q

Which pts should have a head CT w/i 8hrs of arrival?

A
Anticoagulated pts
Loss of consciousness AND
   -age >65
   -dangerous mechanism of injury
   -retrograde amnesia >30mins
18
Q

Which pts should be admitted following head injury?

A

If imaging shows pathology
GCS <15 (monitory every 30mins)
Continuing worrying signs/sources of concern

19
Q

What is normal ICP?

A

0-10mmHg

20
Q

What are the causes of increased ICP?

A

Vasogenic (tumour, trauma, ischaemia, infection)
Cytotoxic
Interstitial (obstructive hydrocephalus)

21
Q

What are the sx of increasing ICP?

A

Headache - dull, persistent, worse on lying, present on waking, worse w/ coughing/straining
Vomiting
Seizures
Irritability

22
Q

What are the signs of increasing ICP?

A

GCS deterioration
Progressive dilation of pupil on affected side
Cushing’s reflex
Cheyne-Stokes respiration

23
Q

What is the management of raised ICP?

A
ABCDE
Elevate head of bed to 30-40o
Hyperventilate (reduce PaCO2)
Mannitol (0.2g/kg 20% IV over 15 mins)
Corticosteroids
Fluid restriction
Controlled hypothermia, CSF drainage, barbiturates
24
Q

How long does Papilloedema take to develop?

A

Weeks

25
Q

What is the general approach to investigating spinal cord injuries?

A

ABCDE
Determine MOI
Examination
Imaging - AP/lat/C2 XR, CT C-spine, whole spinal XR

26
Q

What additional measures are required for unconscious pts?

A

C-spine stabilisation if traumatic
Urgent CT head if signs of deterioration
Cervical/Thoracic/Lumbar XR

27
Q

What five factors in a conscious pt suggest that the C-spine has not been damaged?

A
Simple rear-end RTA
Sitting position in ED
Walking at any time
Delayed onset of neck pain
Absence of C-spine tenderness
28
Q

How can the C-spine be assessed if it seems likely there has been no damage?

A

Pt asked to rotate neck 45o to left/right

29
Q

What should be done if there is any uncertainty about damage to the C-spine?

A

Get radiological input