Title: Traumatic Brain Injury
1Traumatic Brain Injury
- Pathophysiology OTA Course
- For 4th year students
2Objectives
-To describe the common pathophysiological
features of head injury -To define the
mechanisms of hypoxic-ischaemic damage at
neuronal level -To support the importance of
raused intracranial pressure in the determination
of severity in the outcome in head injured
patients -To define the consequences of
traumatic events - case studies
3How do patients present?
- Obvious--motor vehicle accident, car vs
pedestrian, fall from height, etc - Less obvious--sports injuries (football), delayed
deterioration (epidural) - Hidden--shaken baby syndrome
4Primary Brain Injury
- Primary
- Focal
- Local signs
- Contra-coup
- Diffuse
- Diffuse axonal injury
5Secondary Brain Injury
- Global
- Hypoxia and ischemia of brain
- Decreased cerebral blood flow due to increased
intracranial pressure - Local
- impairment of cerebral blood flow or extra
cellular milieu due to the presence of injured
brain - Biochemical Cascade
- Blood Flow changes (Global/regional)
6 Cerebral blood flow
- The brain has the ability to control its blood
supply to match its metabolic requirements - Chemical or metabolic byproducts of cerebral
metabolism can alter blood vessel caliber and
behavior
7Monro-Kellie doctrine
- Volume of intracranial compartment must remain
constant because of inelastance of skull - Normal State- ICV is a balance among blood, brain
CSF. - With increase ICV? ICP remains normal till
compensation can occur - At the point of decompensation The ICP starts to
increase. - The brains compensatory reserve is called
Compliance
8Intracranial Hypertension
- ICP monitoring and control are the cornerstones
of TBI management - Normal ICP
- When to treat?
9Cerebral edema - cytotoxic
Caused mainly by activation of cytokines, ROS and
other pro-inflammatory mediators
10Cerebral edema - vasogenic
Caused mainly by activation of NMDA receptors by
glutamate
11Two clinical types of brain injury
- Closed brain injury
- Open brain injury
12Diffuse axonal injury
- Hallmark of severe Traumatic Brain Injury
- Differential movement of adjacent regions of
brain during acceleration and deceleration. - DAI is major cause of prolonged coma after TBI,
probably due to disruption of ascending reticular
connections to cortex.