Head Trauma Flashcards
Concussion
Description
Pathology
- 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)
Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy
Description (early / late)
Gross pathology
Microscopic pathology
- 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.
Coup injuries
Occur w/ stationary or moving heads
Contrecoup injuries
Usually seen in abrupt deceleration of heads in motion. Anterior / middle cranial fossae are rough in adult.
Ecchimosis
Description
Example
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).
Pontemedullary laceration
Caused by hyperextension of head, such as in being rear-ended in a car. Rarely survivable
Subdural hemorrhage in an infant
Marker for possible inflicted trauma (“shaking”). Abuse.
Brain matter in infants is softer than in adults b/c it is not myelinated yet.
Trauma in infants due to shaking
- 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