Pathology of Head Injury Flashcards

1
Q

What are the basic types of injury at the skin level?

A
  • Bruises (Contusions)
  • Abrasions (Grazes)
  • Lacerations (Tears/splits)
  • Incisions (Cuts)
  • Thermal Injuries
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2
Q

What causes a bruise?

A

Blunt Force trauma causes the injured vessel to leak blood

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3
Q

How can bruising help us determine what happened?

A

The pattern of bruising can help us tell what happened to the person

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4
Q

How does a black eye happen?

A

Blood tracts to and collects around the eye when there injury to the brow or forehead.
A direct injury to the eye is quite unlikely

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5
Q

Whats the difference between lacerations and incisions?

A

A laceration is a blunt force injury causing tears and splits in the tissue, which will often be ragged and bridged by stronger tissues

An incision is a sharp force wound (knife, glass etc) causing a neat, unbridged wound

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6
Q

What are the types of skull fracture?

A
  • Ring fracture
  • Fissure Fracture
  • Depressed (SIGN) Fracture
  • Hairline Fracture
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7
Q

Whats the difference between ring/fissure/hairline fractures

A

Hairline fractures occur on low force and tend to heal easily as they dont communicate outside and are stable

Fissure fractures occur on more force

Ring fractures occur on a lot of force, the fracture travels all the way round the skull, often taking in foramen and sutures on its way

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8
Q

What is a depressed Fracture?

A

Bone forced inward by the injury which may damage, bruise, expose brain.

Generally the bone is comminuted

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9
Q

Comminuted?

A

Broken into several pieces

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10
Q

What layer of meninges do veins traverse?

A

The subdural space from arachnoid to dural sinuses

Called Bridging veins

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11
Q

What are the types of Intracranial Haemorrhages?

A
  • Epidural
  • Subdural
  • Subarachnoid
  • Intracerebral
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12
Q

What type of intracranial haemorrhage in most associated with skull fractures?

A

Epidural

The fracture damages the meningeal arteries, most often the Middle Meningeal Art through the temporal bone

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13
Q

How does a subdural haemorrhage generally occur?

A

When the head is moving fast and impacts something, stopping suddenly.

The brains momentum keeps it moving inside the skull, pulling on and bursting the bridging veins

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14
Q

Subarachnoid haemorrhages can be spontaneous (e.g. aneurysm) or traumatic, What causes a traumatic one?

A

A blow to the neck or the chin causes the head to twist and extend, often in RTAs.

Its tearing of the vertebral arteries as they temporarily leave the C-spine

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15
Q

What are the types of intracerebral injury?

A
  • Cortical Contusion
  • Intracerebral Haemorrhage
  • Diffuse Axonal Injury
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16
Q

How does a cortical contusion occur?

A

Part of a depressed fracture, sudden termination of head movement or impact on the surface of the skull

17
Q

What are coup and contracoup contusions?

A

Coup is a bruising at the site of impact

Contracoup is bruising on the opposite region of the brain as it impacts the skull when moved by force of impact

18
Q

What are the types of intracerebral haemorrhage?

A

Natural
Due to hypertension, tumours, Arteriovenous anomalies etc

Traumatic

19
Q

How does diffuse axonal injury occur?

A

Extreme force causes many superficial and deep haemorrhages

This tends to cause rapid death or brain damage