There is general agreement that aggressive management and monitoring of the patient with closed head injury with control of intracranial pressure (ICP) will improve patient survival and eventual outcome. Conversely, there is little agreement on the value of surgical craniectomy for increasing intracranial volume and subsequently decreasing ICP in these same patients. This study examines 115 patients with severe closed head injuries (Glasgow Coma Score 8 or less) seen at the North Carolina Baptist Hospital between July 1, 1983, and April 1, 1987. All 115 patients were started on a regimen of head elevation, fluid restriction, chemoparalysis, and hyperventilation at PCO2 25-30 torr. Fifty-seven patients failed to respond to that therapy and were given mannitol. Twenty-seven of these still failed to respond; 24 were placed in a pentobarbital coma therapy group and 3 underwent subtemporal decompression. Of the 24 patients in pentobarbital coma, 17 failed to respond, 7 of whom underwent subtemporal decompression and 10 of whom were not operated on. Of all 10 patients undergoing subtemporal decompression, 7 (70%) responded with an average reduction in ICP of 34% (+/- 19.5% SD). Of the 10, 4 died (40%), in contrast with a mortality of 82.4% among patients in pentobarbital coma without subtemporal decompression. These data strongly suggest that subtemporal decompression can be beneficial in patients with medically intractable elevations of ICP.
CT has become the single sufficient and necessary radiographic test in the evaluation of patient with cranial trauma_ Recognition of the classic patterns and variations of traumatic CT abnormalities is challenging and rewarding aspects in head trauma.I n retrospective analysis of CT findings of 532 patients with head trauma, a wide spectrum of traumatic abnormalities were demonstrated : skull fracture , subgaleal hematoma, pneumocephalus , cerebral edema, cerebral contusion , epidural hematoma, subdural hem atom a, subarachnoid hemorrhage, intracerebral hematoma, intraventricular hematoma, brain infarction , hydrocephalus and porencephaly.
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