Neurosurgery
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The importance of delayed or secondary brain insults in the eventual outcome of closed-head trauma has been documented in experimental models. To understand this phenomenon in the clinical setting, we studied a series of head-injured patients in whom multiple cranial computed tomographic (CT) scans were obtained. Patients whose follow-up CT studies revealed new intracranial lesions or worsening, compared with admission findings, were considered to have delayed cerebral injury. ⋯ As expected, the severity of the initial brain trauma contributed significantly to neurological outcome. The presence of delayed cerebral injury makes the outcome dramatically worse for each category of initial injury severity. The relationship between initial and secondary brain injury is discussed.
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We report two patients in whom bullets in the brain migrated into the adjacent lateral ventricle and moved freely as a consequence of gravity. A review of the literature suggests that the spontaneous migration of intracerebral bullets is influenced by cerebral softening, the specific gravity of the bullet compared with brain tissue, and the sink function of the cerebral ventricles. In patients undergoing the surgical removal of intracerebral or intraventricular bullets, it is recommended that an x-ray be obtained after the final positioning of the head.
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The long-term course of intracranial pressure (ICP) was studied in 53 patients from a group of 90 patients with severe head injury treated over a 3-year period. In 49 of these, ICP was significantly elevated during the observation period. The maximum in ICP was usually observed 24 to 96 hours posttrauma. ⋯ Delayed traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage, traumatic vasospasm, hypoxia, and hyponatremia were diagnosed in seven cases. In seven other patients, the secondary ICP rise coincided with a pronounced leukocytosis, which was not associated with apparent infections. Because the occurrence and degree of a secondary rise of ICP after severe head injury are important factors affecting outcome, monitoring of ICP after severe head injury should be prolonged.