Title: Head injuries
1Head injuries
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3I -Scalp injuries (stretched skin) II
Skull. III- Meninges . IV- Brain
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5Infection is dangerous why???
- Cut and contused wounds in the scalp
- What is the problem?
6II -SKULL INJURIES
- Factors governing fractures of the skull
- 1- Force
- 2- Striking surface area( hammer chair)
- 3- Position of the head (supported or not)
- 4- Site of the blow
- The weakest points are the squamous and
temporal bones
7Types of skull fractures -
- 1-Skull fractures due to blunt instruments.
- Fissure depressed comminuted
- 2- Skull fractures due to sharp instruments
- chipped - cut - cut comminuted
81-Fissure fracture (linear fracture)
- - Blunt instrument with wide sticking SA and low
momentum. - It starts at the point of impact.
- It extends parallel to the line of force.
- The fissure may run into sutures
- Multiple blows may produce multiple fissures, but
a second fissure will end when it reaches the
first fissure - Fissure fractures may be alone or they may
accompany other types of fractures.
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10Types of Fissure Fracture.
- Polar fracture
- Ring fracture
- Thermal fracture
112-Depressed fracture
- Caused by blunt instrument with small surface
area and medium force - Depressed localized fractures
- It takes the shape of striking surface
- Usually small in size
- May be accompanied with fissure fracture
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143- Depressed comminuted fracture
- heavy blunt object having a wide Surface area and
high momentum - car accidents,
- fall from height.
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17Dangers of depressed fractures -
- 1- Cerebral laceration
- 2- Intra cranial hemorrhage.
- 3- Cerebral compression.
- 4- Intracranial infection.
- 5- Subjecting the patients to a decompression
operation, this leaves a bony gap and permanent
infirmity.
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192-Skull fractures due to sharp instruments
- A- Sharp and light instrument e.g. knife
- Cut fracture
- Chipped F tangentially causing removal of the
outer table. - B- Sharp and heavy instruments
20Injuries produced by an axe
- 1- The blade of an axe ?? cut fracture.
- 2-If the blade passes tangential to the outer
table ??chipped F - 3- The cut may be triangular if the striking is
done with angle - 4-The striking with the head of the axe??
localized DF. - 5- The handle of the axe ??fissure fractures.
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22 FRACTURES OF THE BASE
- These are usually fissure fractures
- Fracture Anterior fossa ?? eye
- Fracture Middle fossa ?? ear
- Fracture posterior fossa ?? neck
23HEALING OF SKULL FRACTURES
- A- Healing of fissure fracture
- The edges are glued by serous exudates in one
week - Smoothening of the edges in about 2-3 weeks
- Complete closure with osseous in 3-4 months
- B- Healing of depressed / comminuted fracture (no
bone) - C- Healing of cut fractures. As those of fissure
fractures
24Sepsis
- Appears in the skull in the form of bone
erosion affecting either the outer, inner or both
tables within 4-6 weeks. Bone erosion indicates
that the cause of death is possibly septic
intracranial complications - meningitis, brain
abscess or sinus thrombosis
25III- INJURIES TO MENINGES
- 1- Extradural hemorrhage (Traumatic)
- 2- Subdural hemorrhage
- Traumatic ? A- acute
- B-Chronic
(pachymeningitis haemorrhagica ) - Pathological (hypertension- Blood
Disease ---) - 3- Subarachnoid hemorrhage
- 4- Intracerebral hemorrhage
- A- Traumatic Coup injury or Contre-coup
- B- Pathological
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27IV- BRAIN INJURIES
- A- CONCUSSION
- Definition
- C/P
- Fate of concussion
- 1- Complete uncomplicated recovery
- 2- Death
- 3- Compression
28Lucid interval
- Definition
- Mechanism
- Medico legal importance
- Treatment of concussion observation. No
morphine
29B- COMPRESSION
- Definition
- Mechanism Stage of irritation ?Stage of paralysis
- Clinical picture Victim is conscious ?
gradually ? drowsiness ? blurring of vision ?
severe headache (mainly occipital). Then- Fever
effortless central vomiting ?High blood pressure
? slow full pulse ? coma ? death
30Causes of cerebral compression
- 1- Intracranial hemorrhage.
- 2- Pressure by fragments of bone
Treatment of compression
31The following are lateralizing signs of
compression, which are diagnostic to the
compressed side
- On the side of hemorrhage
- The pupils are unequal constricted (more on
affected side) - Conjugate deviation of both eyes
- On the opposite side
- Exaggerated reflex of the other side
- Hemiplegia occurs on the contra lateral side
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33C- brain contusiond- brain lacerationBoth
contusion and laceration can occur in cases of
coup or contre-coup lesion.
34Differences between concussion and compression
- Mechanism
- Loss of consciousness
- Pulse
- BP
- Reflexes
- Vomiting
- Pupils
- Signs of lateralization
- Treatment
35SEQULLAE COMPLICATIONS OF HI
- 1- Post traumatic amnesia or retrograde amnesia
- 2- Post traumatic automation
- 3- Post traumatic neurosis
- 4- Korsakoff's psychosis
- 5- Personality changes
- 6- Jacksonian epilepsy
- 7-Septic complications
- 8-Permanent infirmity
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