Head Trauma Flashcards

1
Q

Concussion
Description
Pathology

A
  • Transient but instant loss of neural function, followed by “recovery”
  • No acute pathologic findings on brain imaging
  • Actual structural changes include damage to mitochondria membranes and cytoskeletal abnormalities.
  • Fiber injury may be present (DAI = diffuse axonal injury) w/ delayed axotomy (severing of axons)
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2
Q

Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy
Description (early / late)
Gross pathology
Microscopic pathology

A
  • Chronic progressive neurodegenerative disease due to repetitive “mild” cranial trauma.
  • Early (I-II) – emotional explositivity, headache, STM changes, concentration, sleep disturbance, depression
  • Late (III-IV) – executive function, cognitive impairment, dementia, aggression, possibly motor issues
  • Gross pathology includes atrophy, cavum septum pellucidum, pallor of pigmented nuclei (such as locus ceruleus), thalamic and mammillary atrophy.
  • Microscopic pathology includes pTau intraneuronal / intraglial neurofibrillary inclusions, neuroaxonal loss, astrocytic tangles, and TDP-43 positive staining in effected areas.
  • Interneuronal spreading of toxic Tau may occur by prion-like mechanism.
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3
Q

Coup injuries

A

Occur w/ stationary or moving heads

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4
Q

Contrecoup injuries

A

Usually seen in abrupt deceleration of heads in motion. Anterior / middle cranial fossae are rough in adult.

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5
Q

Ecchimosis
Description
Example

A

Looks like a bruise, but is caused by oozing of blood from trauma elsewhere.
•Basilar skull fracture may cause pooling of blood behind the ears or in orbits (raccoon eyes).

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6
Q

Pontemedullary laceration

A

Caused by hyperextension of head, such as in being rear-ended in a car. Rarely survivable

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7
Q

Subdural hemorrhage in an infant

A

Marker for possible inflicted trauma (“shaking”). Abuse.

Brain matter in infants is softer than in adults b/c it is not myelinated yet.

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8
Q

Trauma in infants due to shaking

A
  • Pathology may include subdural hemorrhage, ocular retinal hemorrhage, and intracranial mass effect.
  • Cellular pathology includes axonal shearing injury, mainly in centrum semiovale, dorsolateral brainstem, and corpus callosum.
  • Brain may swell → herniation
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