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Intracranial lesions of surgical interest in minor head injuries in paediatric patients

✍ Scribed by U. Godano; A. Serracchioli; F. Servadei; R. Donati; G. Piazza


Publisher
Springer
Year
1992
Tongue
English
Weight
247 KB
Volume
8
Category
Article
ISSN
0256-7040

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✦ Synopsis


Among 62 children and adolescents (1-16 years) admitted over a period of 3 years (1987-1989) with a minor head injury, 33 (53%) were found to harbour intracranial lesions of surgical interest. The most frequent lesion found was extradural haematoma (17 cases), followed by cerebral contusion (7 cases), depressed fracture (4 cases), depressed fracture with underlying contusion (3 cases) and pneumocephalus (2 cases). A skull fracture was present in 88% of patients with an intracranial lesion and in 50% of patients without lesions. Fifteen patients underwent surgery for an extradural haematoma or a depressed fracture. All had a good recovery. No correlation was found between age and Glasgow Coma Score on the one hand, and the incidence of both the presence of intracranial lesions and the necessity of surgical treatment on the other. The only important risk factor proved to be a skull fracture, which had occurred significantly more often in patients with intracranial lesions than in those without any.


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The effects of dihydroergotamine in pati
✍ P.-O. GrΓ€nde πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 1989 πŸ› Springer 🌐 English βš– 441 KB

In the first study 6 patients with raised intracranial pressure due to brain oedema following head injury were given dihydroergotamine because of low perfusion pressure. The intracranial pressure fell simultaneously with the increase in arterial pressure. The intracranial pressure fell from 24 +/- 2