The following lecture has been approved for - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 74
About This Presentation
Title:

The following lecture has been approved for

Description:

The following lecture has been approved for University Undergraduate Students This lecture may contain information, ideas, concepts and discursive anecdotes that may ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:55
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 75
Provided by: hccUceAc
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The following lecture has been approved for


1
The following lecture has been approved for
University Undergraduate Students This lecture
may contain information, ideas, concepts and
discursive anecdotes that may be thought
provoking and challenging It is not intended
for the content or delivery to cause
offence Any issues raised in the lecture may
require the viewer to engage in further thought,
insight, reflection or critical evaluation
2
craig.jackson_at_uce.ac.uk
Introduction to Brain Injury Dr. Craig
Jackson Senior Lecturer in Health
Psychology School of Health and Policy
Studies Faculty of Health Community Care
University of Central England
3
What was Michael Angelos Hidden Message?
Michelangelo. The Creation of Adam
(detail, Sistine Chapel). 1510. Fresco. Sistine
Chapel, Vatican, Rome.
4
Objectives List major structures and function of
nervous system Name types of head and spine
injuries describe clinical features Describe
mechanisms of neurological injury Describe
assessment of head injuries Describe functional
affects and symptoms Describe imaging techniques
5
Neurological Injuries Responsible for 50 of
trauma deaths Approx. 1,000,000 patients in UK
attend AE with head injury per year Can be
prevented (some extent) by helmets and
PPE Major cause of chronic disability Mostly
from Falls, RTAs and Assaults
Flannery Buxton, 2001
6
Anatomy Principles Neuron specialized nerve
cell Dendrites and Axons short and long
processes of neurons Peripheral neurons
sheathed with myelin Impulses transmitted from
synapses to dendrites
7
Anatomy Principles 2 Central Nervous System
brain, spinal cord Peripheral Nervous System
nerves, branches Meninges protective triple
layer cover Dura matter outer
layer Arachnoid middle layer Pia
matter inner layer Cerebral Spinal Fuid (CSF)
circulates in middle layer
8
Anatomy Principles 3 Cerebrum (hemispheres) Cereb
ellum, brainstem Cranial nerves originate at
base of brain Sensory / motor supply to head
and face Motor nerves brain to muscle
units Sensory nerves skin back to
brain Somatic Nervous System voluntary
action Automatic Nervous System involuntary
action
9
Anatomy Principles 4
10
Traumatic Brain Injury Physical force causes
nerve cells to stretch, tear and pull
apart Unable to relay messages through
brain Force causes brain to slam against skull
interior Traumatic Brain Injury Injury to
brain cells affects processing thinking r
emembering seeing control coordination mood
11
Traumatic Brain Injury TBI ranges from mild to
severe degree of force multiple
trauma neurological complications speed of
assistance
12
Head Injuries Severity depends on amount of
Primary and Secondary brain injury Main cause
of Secondary injury hypoxia Categories Open
or Closed Forces Shearing and Compression
13
Non Loss of Function 41 yr old Mike
Hill Attacked from behind Full recovery after
removal No infection Left hospital 1 week
after removal Epileptic medication and some
memory problems
14
Functional Status SPECT image
with Technetium (T99)
15
Pathophysiological Disturbance Involve scalp,
cranium, or underlying brain Depends on
mechanism of injury Scalp lacerations,
contusions, abrasions Skull fractures vault /
base, simple or compound, depressed or
planar Primary Brain Injury Focal
(intra-cranial haematoma, contusion) Diffuse
(diffuse axonal injury) Categories Open or
Closed Forces Shearing and Compression
16
Closed or Open Head Injury Closed Head
Injury (CHI) No penetration of the
skull Usually a TBI Not always
though Open head Injury (OHI) Bullet, Knife,
or Fracture Skull breeched Brain injury
depends on power of physical force injury If
great enough, forces radiates through skull,
causes sudden brain movement Results in damaged
nerve cells May result in soft tissue
injury - cervical strain myofascial trauma
17
Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Head injury graded
on (i) length of unconsciousness (ii)
length of amnesia Both caused by sudden trauma
and nerve cell tearing Brain cannot maintain
functioning and shuts down either fully
(unconsciousness) or partially (dazed) MBI
refers to loss of consciousness for 30 mins or
less Unconscious Amnesia Any of these
Diffuse Axonal Altered consciousness indicates
MBI Injury neurological deficits MBI
can result in life changing consequences
18
Diffuse Axonal Injury Thinking slows
down Memory poor Mild Brain Injury Processing
slower Concentration haphazard Roadblocks of
damaged unconnected neurons Individual
feels Incomplete emotional
problems Unconfident Frustrated Described as
mental fog Irritable Struggling cognitive
problems
19
Brain Injury without Direct Trauma Whiplash
Shaking Sudden movement inside cranium damages
neurons Acceleration Deceleration RTAs even
with airbag deployment can cause brain
injury Brain is torn, squashed,
bruised Rollercoasters
20
Types of Head Injuries Concussion Temporary
alteration in neurological function or
LOR Cerebral Contusion Bruised
brain Cerebral Haemotoma or bleed epidural s
ub-dural sub-arachnoid intra-cerebral
21
Signs and Symptoms Headache Dizziness Nausea /
Vomiting Amnesia Decreased responsiveness Confu
sion Combativeness Loss of responsiveness
22
Assessment First impression Responsive or
Unresponsive Urgent Survey LOR ABCs Open
airway with C-spine Check breathing Ventilate
Oral airway O2 when available Check carotid
artery pulse CPR if indicated Control any
major bleeding
23
Assessment continued Rapid Body Survey Sample,
DCAP-BTLS Stabilize head between knees Call for
equipment, assistance, transport Maintain body
temp. Transport (head uphill) Non-Urgent
Survey Ongoing Survey seizures, vomiting,
change in LOR
24
  • Assessment continued
  • Brain Swelling
  • ?
  • Increased Intracranial Pressure (ICP)
  • ?
  • Hypoxia
  • ?
  • Further Secondary Brain Injury
  • ?
  • More Swelling
  • ?
  • Increased ICP

25
Localised Neurological Signs (ICP) GENERAL SIGNS
PLUS Change in pupil size / light
reactivity Slowing pulse Rising BP. Change in
respiration Unilateral weakness Incontinence Se
izure
26
Urgent Interventions - ATLS Presume C-Spine
injury Immobilize neck Open airway administer
oxygen Treat bleeding and shock Prevent
aspiration of vomit / secretions Transport
immediately Elevate head 6 Transport head
uphill
27
Imaging Xray, MRI and CT cannot show traumatic
brain injury Techniques rely on tissue
density Diffuse damage will not show on these
techniques SPECT or PET measure brain cell
metabolism Can detect changes in function due
brain injury
28
Behavioural Changes Speech Cognition Memory Mood
Mental health psychoses delirium Tremor Gait Sym
metry of function Gross over-simplification Visu
al Auditory Positive and negative symptoms
29
Other Causes of Brain Injury Drug
effects Tumor Metastases Physical
assault Surgery Traumatic birth Hypoxia
30
Glasgow Coma Scale Scores 8 or
less needs urgent anaesthetic assessment.
Danger of airway compromise 13-15 mild
9-12 moderate 3-8 severe
31
Queens Medical Centre
32
Cerebral Asymmetry of Function Hemispheric
asymmetry of function is relative Asymmetries
have been overblown by popular media into fads
(e.g. golf with your right brain) Anterior-post
erior differences far outweigh left-right
differences Asymmetry is not uniquely human

33
Cerebral Asymmetry of Function LEFT
HEMISPHERE Convolutions mature more rapidly
Extends further posteriorly Higher in density
(more gray matter more neurons) Planum
temporale larger on left (in 60-90) of cases
Larger insula Longer Sylvian fissure (gentler
slope) Double cingulate gyrus Larger lateral
posterior nucleus (to parietal cortex) Wider
occipital lobe Larger total area of frontal
operculum (much buried in sulci) Larger inferior
parietal lobule
34
Cerebral Asymmetry of Function RIGHT
HEMISPHERE Convolutions mature less rapidly
Extends further anteriorly Larger and heavier
Primary auditory (Heshl's gyrus) larger on
right Shorter (steeper slope) Single Larger
medial geniculate nucleus Narrower Larger area
of convexity in frontal lobe wider frontal lobe
35
Cortical Lesions Human cognitive and sensory
dysfunction different following lesions (due to
strokes, surgery, accident, etc.) Differences
noted in lesions to left and right
hemispheres Lesions can provide clues about
brain organization Do specific areas possess
special unique functions? Does a lesion to a
specific area demonstrate a dysfunction Lesions
to other brain locations do not cause a similar
dysfunction
36
Dissociation Lesion site Reading Writing Spea
king 100 normal normal impaired 102 impa
ired normal normal 104 normal impaired
normal Allows understanding of specific sites
and impairments
37
Hemispherical Function Left Right Vision
linguistic stimuli patterns
faces steropsis Audition language
sounds rhythm Somatosensation tactile
recognition Motor complex movement spatial
movement Memory verbal memory non-verbal
memory Language speech reading prosody wr
iting arithmetic Emotion social
emotions primary emotions Spatial
processes geometry spatial images orientation
38
Split Brain and Commissurotomy Corpus Callosum
joins hemispheres Sever corpus callosum Two
hemispheres cannot communicate
39
Brain Injury - Summary 1. The main cause of
secondary damage to the brain is _ _ _ _ _ _ _
? 2. Head injury alone rarely causes damage. T
/ F? 3. Temporary loss of consciousness or
function from a head trauma is a _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ ? 4. Brain injury can occur without any
impact trauma. T / F 5. Axons being damaged /
shredded is the simple reason for cognitive
problems in head injury patients. T / F
40
Hemispherical test I always wear a watch
1
41
Hemispherical test I keep a journal
2
42
Hemispherical test I believe there is a
right and wrong way to do everything
3
43
Hemispherical test I hate following
directions
4
44
Hemispherical test The expression "Life is
just a bowl of cherries" makes no sense to me
5
45
Hemispherical test I find that sticking to
a schedule is boring
6
46
Hemispherical test I'd rather draw someone
a map the tell them how to get somewhere
7
47
Hemispherical test If I lost something, I'd
try to remember where I saw last
8
48
Hemispherical test If I don't know which
way to turn, I let my emotions guide me
9
49
Hemispherical test I'm pretty good at math
10
50
Hemispherical test If I had to assemble
something, I'd read the directions first
11
51
Hemispherical test I'm always late getting
places
12
52
Hemispherical test Some people think I'm
psychic
13
53
Hemispherical test Setting goals for myself
helps keep me from slacking off
14
54
Hemispherical test When somebody asks me a
question, I turn my head to the left
15
55
Hemispherical test If I have a tough
decision to make, I write down the pros and the
cons
16
56
Hemispherical test I'd make a good detective
17
57
Hemispherical test I am musically inclined
18
58
Hemispherical test If I have a problem, I
try to work it out by relating it to one I've had
in the past
19
59
Hemispherical test When I talk, I gesture a
lot
20
60
Hemispherical test If someone asks me a
question, I turn my head to the right
21
61
Hemispherical test I believe there are two
sides to every story
22
62
Hemispherical test I can tell if someone is
guilty just by looking at them
23
63
Hemispherical test I keep a to do list
24
64
Hemispherical test I feel comfortable
expressing myself with words
25
65
Hemispherical test Before I take a stand on
an issue, I get all the facts
26
66
Hemispherical test I've considered becoming
a poet, a politician, an architect, or a dancer
27
67
Hemispherical test I lose track of time
easily
28
68
Hemispherical test If I forgot someone's
name, I'd go through the alphabet until I
remembered it
29
69
Hemispherical test I like to draw
30
70
Hemispherical test When I'm confused, I
usually go with my gut instinct
31
71
Hemispherical test I have considered
becoming a lawyer, journalist, or doctor
32
72
Hemispherical test 1. L 2. L 3. L 4.
R 5. L 6. R 7. R 8. L 9. R
10. L 11. L 12. R
73
Hemispherical test 13. R 14. L 15. R 16.
L 17. L 18. R 19. R 20. R 21. L 22. R
23. R 24. L
74
Hemispherical test 25. L 26. L 27. R
28. R 29. L 30. R 31. R 32. L
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com