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- Haydar Gok, Suat Erol Celik, Kivanc Yangi, Ahmed Yasin Yavuz, Gokhan Percinoglu, Nazmi Ugur Unlu, and Kamber Goksu.
- Department of Neurosurgery, Turkish Republic Ministry of Health, University of Health Sciences, Prof.Dr.Cemil Tascioglu City Hospital, Sisli, Istanbul, Turkey.
- World Neurosurg. 2023 Jul 3.
ObjectiveWe retrospectively reviewed and evaluated our treatment protocols in epidural hematoma (EDH) cases to compare surgical versus nonsurgical treatment subsections with their trauma mechanism, injury type, clinical pattern, radiological details, functional outcome, and mortality rates.MethodsThis study included 350 patients (142 females and 208 males) treated for EDH between 2010 and 2018. Two hundred seven operated and 143 observed patients for EDH were compared for demography, injury type, treatment, and outcome scores retrospectively. Glasgow Coma Scale and Glasgow Outcome Scale were used to standardize the clinical findings. Marshall and Rotterdam classifications classified radiological abnormalities. The Infinity PACS system measured hematoma volume, and volume parameters were evaluated differently in pediatric and adult groups.ResultsRadiological parameters showed that the observation was more favorable when the EDH volume was <30 ml in the adult and <20 ml in the pediatric group. However, close clinical follow-up with repeated computerized tomography scans suggested that when the hematoma increases in volume in the first 24 hours, it should be treated surgically. Headache, vomiting, and paresis were significant clinical symptoms in this period. Only 11% of conservatively followed cases required delayed surgical intervention. When we analyzed the findings of the 2 groups of the patient, pediatric and adult, we noticed that rebleeding after the first surgery was more common in the adult group than the pediatric group, whereas surgery due to a growing hematoma was less common in the pediatric group.ConclusionsAge, trauma severity, initial neurological statuses, and accompanying comorbidities can affect the functional outcome in acute EDH. We found that urgent surgical intervention and conservative treatment may lead to excellent results in most cases. Thus, EDH can be managed both conservatively and surgically in certain conditions. We made a comparison between pediatric and adult age groups according to treatment modalities. Both rebleeding and mortality rates are relatively lower in the pediatric operated group than in the adult operated group. In the adult observation group, rates of delayed surgery because of growing hematoma seem relatively higher than in the pediatric observation group. During radiological follow-up, we found that the progression rate of EDH in the adult observed group according to time is faster than in the pediatric observed group (P < 0.05).Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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