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Published byOswald Bridges Modified over 9 years ago
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Subdural Hematoma By Sean Stives
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What is it? Subdural = beneath (visceral to) the dura Hematoma = a blood clot Damage caused by increased pressure on the brain Often fatal: 50-90% mortality rate Accounts for 10-20% of traumatic brain injuries Can often accompany a cerebral contusion
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How is it caused? Rapid acceleration or deceleration of the brain tears the veins around the skull Brain's inertia competes with the skull's movement like a passenger in a motor vehicle Puts force on bridging veins that help keep brain in place If the force becomes too great, the vein tears. Primary mechanisms: whiplash & blunt force trauma
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Subdural Hematoma Click Me Arrow Points to a subdural hematoma on a CT scan
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Two Types of Subdural Hematomas Acute Clot is new More common version Chronic Clot is old Often in patients aged 60+ Brain atrophy causes shrinkage More space = less pressure Clots are larger but signs and symptoms show up later Happen more easily
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Signs and Symptoms May take hours, days, or weeks for signs and symptoms to show. (Because veins are torn. Not arteries.) Headache that increases over time Exercise-induced headaches Dizziness, nausea, hearing & visual disturbances, concentration issues, and unequal pupils Low Glasgow Coma Scale scores
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Treatment & Recovery True medical emergency Get person to a hospital immediately Hematoma appears on a CT scan. Usually requires rapid surgical intervention Brain surgery patients' recoveries vary ~20-30% regain some or all brain function young adults, those with a GCS score > 6 or 7, and those without multiple brain contusions have the best chances at a successful recovery
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What to remember Caused by a rapid acceleration/deceleration mechanism Blood clot beneath the dura mater of the cranial cavity Tears veins around the brain Requires immediate medical attention
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