Pathology of Head Injury Flashcards
What are the different kinds of head injury?
- Primary insult
- Focal and/or diffuse brain trauma
- Secondary insult
- Hypotension (low arterial BP)
- Hypoxia (low blood oxygen)
- Infection
- Haematoma (bleeding in/around the brain)
What are examples of primary head injury?
- Focal and/or diffuse brain trauma
What are examples of secondary head injuries?
- Hypotension (low arterial BP)
- Hypoxia (low blood oxygen)
- Infection
- Haematoma (bleeding in/around the brain)
What is done for the initial assessment for someone with a head injury?
- Conscious level assessed using Glasgow Coma Scale
- Scored out of 15 (15 is fully conscious)
- 13-15 is mild injury
- 9-12 is moderate injury
- 3-8 in severe injury
What are the 3 kinds of injury on the GCS?
Mild
Moderate
Severe
What are significant consequences of head injury?
- Permanent physical disability
- Post traumatic epilepsy
- Intracranial infection
- Psychiatric illness
- Chronic subdural haemorrhage
- ‘Punch drunk’ dementia
- Fatal outcome (uncommon)
What is the relationship between forensics and head injury?
- Head injuries can result from
- Accidental, homicidal and sometimes suicidal incidents
- Accidents very common, such as falls and road traffic collisions
- Homicidal may be consequence of being struck by a weapon or from a fall sustained as part of an insult
- Natural disease can also occur causing collapse with a resulting head injury
What are different kinds of scalp injuries?
Similar to those that can affect the skin, such as:
- Abrasions
- Bruises
- Lactations
- Incisions
- Burns and scalds
Why is the scalp a common site for laceration?
Common site for laceration because it is closely applied to the skull and tearing is more likely to occur in these circumstances
What do skull fractures cause?
Skull fractures cause deformation of the skull, adult skulls are less able to cope with distortion that those of infants
What are the 2 elements of the skull?
- Skull vault (upper part)
- Includes frontal bone, squamous temporal bones and occipital bone which are separate by sutures
- Skull base (upon which the brain rests)
- Divided into anterior, middle and posterior cranial fossa
What is the skull vault composed of?
- Includes frontal bone, squamous temporal bones and occipital bone which are separate by sutures
What is the skull base divided into?
- Divided into anterior, middle and posterior cranial fossa
What are the different kinds of skull fractures?
- Linear
- Commonly temporo-parietal blow or fall onto side or top of head
- Depressed
- Focal impact may push fragments inwards to damage meninges, blood vessels and the brain
- Risk of meningitis and post-traumatic epilepsy
- Comminuted (mosaic)
- Fragmented skull
- Ring fracture
- Fracture line encircling the foramen magnum caused by a fall from height, usually langing on the feet
- “Contre coup” fracture
- Fracturing of the orbital plates (anterior fossa) caused by a fall onto the back of the head
What commonly causes a linear skull fracture?
- Commonly temporo-parietal blow or fall onto side or top of head
What causes a depressed skull fracture?
- Focal impact may push fragments inwards to damage meninges, blood vessels and the brain
What are people at risk of after a depressed skull fracture?
- Risk of meningitis and post-traumatic epilepsy
What is a comminuted (mosaic) skull fracture?
- Fragmented skull
What is a ring skull fracture?
- Fracture line encircling the foramen magnum caused by a fall from height, usually landing on the feet
What is a contre-coup skull fracture?
- Fracturing of the orbital plates (anterior fossa) caused by a fall onto the back of the head