Pathology of Head Injury Flashcards
What are the basic types of mechanical injury?
Bruises (contusions) Abrasions Lacerations Incisions Thermal Injuries
What causes bruises? Particularly why does a black eye form?
Blunt force
Black eye
- direct injury of orbit/socket not that common but blood will move there due to forces
- two black unlikely to be caused by two separate blows
- suspicion should be injury further up, or deeper inside skull
- blood is tracking down to eyes due to gravity/tissue
Features of incised injuries?
Sharp force injury
- only damage to this part
- (more) easily stitched
Features of lacerations?
Tear/split in skin due to application of energy
- break at weakest point, damage to surrounding area also
- stronger tissues may bridge wound
Blunt force
Different types of skull fractures? What type of forces lead to each
Ring fracture - greater energy, comminution
Fissure fracture - lesser energy, usually due to blunt force
Depressed fracture - bone pushed inwards, localised blunt force, shape may represent weapon, +/- comminuted
Hairline fracture - often no treatment needed, difficult when impinge other structures
Sutural Diastasis - abnormal widening of skull sutures
What are the different types of intracranial haemorrhage?
What can cause them?
Extradural - bleeding meningeal arteries, 90% fracture associated, usually maintained unconsciousness but not always immediate
Subdural
- most no fracture
- brain movement in relation to dura/skull - emissary veins damaged
- those already with brain shrinkage more prone (veins already stretched)
Subarachnoid
- spontaneous e.g. ruptured aneurysm
- traumatic - small ones e.g. cortical contusions
- traumatic - larger - sudden acceleration/rotation
- – vertebral artery damaged
- – usually quick death
What are the different types of intracerebral haemorrhage?
Cortical contusion - brain injured after striking inner aspect of skull
- coup = contusion at site of impact
- contrecoup = contusion at opposite site
- contrecoup often larger
Intracerebral haemorrhage
- natural disease e.g. hypertensive, AV anomaly, amyloid angiopathy, vascular tumours
- traumatic - vulnerable vessels
Diffuse axonal injury
- large accelerational/decelerational forces suggesting rotation
- all neurons suffer
- haemorrhages e.g. in basal ganglia, corpus callosum
- often instantaneous death