Head Injury Flashcards
How does the anatomy of the head make it vulnerably to injury?
Enclosed in a rigid compartment so easily compressed when swelling/hematoma
What is the significance of the Munro-Kelly doctrine?
- explains relationship between intracranial pressure and content
- brain, CSF and blood are usual contents so = fixed intracranial volume
What is the compensated state of the brain?
- if space occupied by mass/swelling
- compensated for by displacing CSF into spine/venous blood into circulation
What is the decompensated state of the brain?
- rising intra-cranial pressure
- decrease in cerebral perfusion pressure of the brain
- CPP = Mean arterial pressure - intracranial pressure
What are the 3 types of herniation?
- sulfacine
- tentorial
- tonsillar
What is a sulfacine herniation?
brain is pushed beneath the falx cerebri (often cingulate cortex)
- causes further pressure on ACA
What is a tentorial herniation?
2 types
- lateral: compresses CN III causing down and out movement
- central: through tentorial notch
What is a tonsillar herniation?
Through foramen magnum of cerebellar tonsils
- compresses brainstem and can stop breathing
What are the layers of the scalp?
S - skin C - connective tissue A - aponeurosis L - loose connective tissue P - pericranium
What are the 3 layers of the meninges?
Dura, arachnoid and pia mater
What are the main types of traumatic brain injury?
- extradural haematoma
- subdural haemorrhage
- subarachnoid haemorrhage
- orbital blow out fractures
- C spine
What are the features of a extradural haematoma?
- impact
- when vessel running between skull and dura is torn
- damage to artery or large venous sinus
- accumulates slowly
Which artery is normally torn in an extradural haematoma?
idle meningeal artery
Why do extradural haematomas accumulate slowly?
Dura is strongly adhered to the inner skull so enlarged clot will slowly strip dura from the skull
What are the features of a subdural haemorrhage?
- caused by movement of the brain (acceleration/deceleration)
- brain movement lags skull movement so there is friction within the subdural space
- this tears bridging veins
- blood can spread out across space quickly