5. a. Head Injuries Flashcards

1
Q

What effects does an uncal herniation have?

A

CN3: dilated pupil
PCA: stroke
Corticospinal tract in midbrain: contralateral hemiparesis
Eventually results in ipsilateral weakness

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2
Q

What effect does a subfalcine herniation have?

A

ACA: weakness in leg

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3
Q

What effect does a transforaminal herniation have?

A

Cushing response

  • Raised ICP
  • Bradycardia
  • erratic breathing
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4
Q

What is the mechanism of the Cushing response?

A

Herniation puts pressure on the brainstem, causing hypoxia in the central chemoreceptors
BP is increased to increase perfusion, and due to high BP baroreceptors in the CVS cause reflex bradycardia
Pressure on the medulla causes erratic breathing

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5
Q

How is cerebral perfusion calculated?

A

MAP-ICP

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6
Q

How is MAP calculated?

A

Diastolic + 1/3pulse pressure

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7
Q

What are the systemic causes of secondary brain injury?

A

Hypoxia, hypercapnia
Hypotension
Hyperthermia
Poor glycaemic control

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8
Q

What are the intracranial causes of secondary brain injury?

A
Brain swelling
Brain shift and herniation
Raised ICP
Post-traumatic fits
Infection
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9
Q

What is the treatment for extradural or acute subdural haematoma?

A

Emergency craniotomy

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10
Q

How is chronic blood differentiated from acute blood in a subdural haematoma?

A

Acute is whiter

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11
Q

What patient groups are chronic subdural haematomas seen in?

A

Elderly, anticoagulants, alcoholism

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12
Q

What is the treatment for a chronic subdural haematoma?

A

Burr hole drainage

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13
Q

What is the treatment for an intracerebral haematoma?

A

Usually conservative as blood can be resorbed

Evacuate the haematoma if raised ICP or midline shift

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14
Q

When should a diffuse axonal injury be suspected?

A

Prolonged unconsciousness without a mass lesion

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15
Q

What is the macroscopic appearance of the brain in diffuse axonal injury?

A

Ventricles compressed

Sulci visible

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16
Q

What is the treatment for a diffuse axonal injury?

A

Conservative

Decompressive craniectomy

17
Q

What are the stages for eyes in the Glasgow coma scale?

A
  1. does not open
  2. opens to pain
  3. opens to command
  4. opens spontaneously
18
Q

What are the stages for verbal response on the Glasgow coma scale?

A
  1. no speech
  2. incomprehensible sounds
  3. inappropriate words
  4. confused speech
  5. orientated
19
Q

What are the stages for motor response on the Glasgow coma scale?

A
  1. no movement
  2. extension to pain
  3. abnormal flexion to pain
  4. normal flexion to pain
  5. localises to pain
  6. obeys commands
20
Q

What is the management of raised ICP?

A
Keep head at 30 degrees
Mannitol and furosemide (avoid low vol)
Hypertonic saline
Sedation, analgesia
Induce hyperventilation and hypothermia
21
Q

What is the surgical management of raised ICP?

A

ICP bolt to monitor pressure
Surgical removal of pathology
External ventricular drain
Decompressive craniectomy