Articles: brain-injuries.
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Journal of neurosurgery · May 1988
Case ReportsPenetrating intracranial wood wounds: clinical limitations of computerized tomography.
The case history of a patient with a periorbital penetrating wooden foreign body is presented. The computerized tomography (CT) densities of several different sources of wood were compared using an experimental model. The clinical usefulness and practical limitations of CT in the evaluation of intracranial foreign bodies is discussed, and the management of this type of injury is reviewed.
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Journal of neurosurgery · May 1988
Prognostic value of auditory brain-stem responses for late postconcussion symptoms following minor head injury.
Minor head injury is frequently followed by a subjective postconcussion syndrome. Brain-stem auditory evoked responses (BAER's) were found to be pathological in different small series of patients with a postconcussion syndrome who were examined months after sustaining a slight cranial or cervical trauma; abnormal BAER's have also been reported in larger groups of patients examined early after minor head injury. A relationship between these findings and late subjective symptoms has never been demonstrated. ⋯ This study confirms the disturbance of brain-stem function in some head-injured patients. However, the lack of correlation with a postconcussion syndrome limits the prognostic value of BAER recordings for postconcussion syndrome. The data suggest that BAER's not be used for medicolegal evaluation of patients with a postconcussion syndrome.
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Zh Vopr Neirokhir Im N N Burdenko · May 1988
Comparative Study[Use of a point-scale assessment of patient status in the surgical treatment of craniocerebral injuries].
The indications and contraindications for surgical treatment in craniocerebral trauma (CCT) were based on estimation of the patient's condition in marks; the dynamics of changes of the results of the estimation in the pre- and postoperative periods were studied. A total of 375 patients with CCT were examined in different medical institutions according to a unified method. ⋯ All patients who underwent operation when their condition was rated below 15 marks died on the immediate postoperative days, whatever their age and whatever the time of the operation after the trauma. The probability of a favourable outcome increased to 40% in a condition rated 21-30 marks on the day of the operation and reached 69% when it was above 30 marks.