• Neurosurgery · Jul 1991

    Civilian craniocerebral gunshot wounds.

    • E C Benzel, W T Day, L Kesterson, B K Willis, C W Kessler, D Modling, and T A Hadden.
    • Division of Neurosurgery, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque.
    • Neurosurgery. 1991 Jul 1;29(1):67-71; discussion 71-2.

    AbstractExperience with 120 patients who incurred a gunshot wound to the head with dural penetration is presented. All of the patients were managed by a standard resuscitation protocol and assigned a clinical grade based on their level of consciousness both at the time of presentation and at 2 to 4 months after injury. Fifty patients (42%) underwent surgery. Twenty-eight patients (23%) had a good recovery, 19 (16%) were moderately disabled, 6 (5%) were severely disabled, and 67 (56%) died. All patients who were alert and awake with a normal or near normal neurological examination at the time of admission survived with a good outcome. All but 4 patients who were comatose at the time of admission died. Nine patients, however, who were not comatose at the time of admission died from potentially preventable causes. In 3 of these patients, a more aggressive diagnostic approach (including cerebral angiography) may have altered their ultimate outcome. An expeditious approach to the trauma victim with a comprehensive management scheme after injury may have altered the course in the remainder of these patients.

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