GENERAL PRINCIPLES
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is caused
by two mechanisms,
impact,
and
movement
of the brain inside the skull.
Impact, (a blow to the head, a fall in
which the head hits the ground) can cause
a fracture or a sudden deformation of
the skull without a fracture. In either
case, mechanical forces transmitted to
the underlying brain, compress or lacerate
its surface and cause ripples of shock
waves that travel through it and injure
parts remote from the impact. The tentorium
holds the brainstem and cerebellum tight
in the posterior fossa. These structures
do not move. The cerebral hemispheres
are thus tethered to the posterior fossa
by the brainstem. The cerebral hemispheres
are not fixed rigidly inside the skull
and have considerable room to move. When
the stationary head is suddenly accelerated
from a blow (or from shaking) or when
the moving head is suddenly stopped upon
hitting the dashboard or a hard floor,
the brain goes into a violent, mostly
sagittal, but also side-to-side and swirling
motion. This motion stretches axons, tears
blood vessels, and damages the surface
of the brain as it bounces against bony
ridges at the base of the skull. One or
both mechanisms, causing varied lesions,
may be involved in any given case of TBI.
TBI may involve any part of the brain
and its meninges. Cerebral contusions
and lacerations are more common with impact
injuries, and subdural hematoma and diffuse
axonal injury are caused by movement of
the brain. Most TBI occurs with closed
head injuries and without fractures.
Some
traumatic lesions, such as epidural and
subdural hematomas, merely compress
the brain and raise the intracranial
pressure. Other lesions, such as contusions
and diffuse axonal injury, cause structural
brain damage.
Severe TBI
is accompanied by HIE
and focal ischemic lesions. These are caused by cardiorespiratory
arrest occurring in severe concussion,
the release of excitatory neurotransmitters
by neurons, vascular spasm in cases with
subarachnoid hemorrhage, direct traumatic
vascular disruption, and other factors.
Trauma induces also neurochemical alterations
that disturb cerebral blood flow,
increase vascular permeability, and produce
beta amyloid precursor protein.
In severe
TBI, there are often multiple lesions
and different types of lesions, e.g.,
epidural hematoma, subdural hematoma,
contusions, etc. Even if there are no
detectable lesions, head injury can cause
transient loss of of neurological function
and autonomic paralysis (cerebral concussion).
When a patient with severe TBI arrrives
at the Emergency Department, the Glascow
Coma Scale can give a rough idea of the
severity of neurological depression but
it is hard to sort through the effects
of different lesions and predict if neurological
function will be restored. Mortality,
in the immediate post traumatic period,
is due mainly to increased
intracranial pressure and HIE. Survivors from severe
TBI may have seizures, focal neurologic
deficits, dementia, or the persistent
vegetative state.
Trauma is a risk factor for Alzheimer's
disease.
SKULL FRACTURES
A skull fracture is classified by the configuration
or pattern it displays. The most frequent type,
linear fracture, is a straight
crack or break produced by a blow to the skull. A fracture that is displaced
by a distance equal to the thickness of the skull or more is a
depressed
skull fracture. A skull fracture does not necessarily indicate underlying
brain damage. Skull fractures may create a communication between the intracranial
compartment and septic areas such as air sinuses, nasal fossae, and middle
and external ear, leading to infection of the brain and meninges.
EPIDURAL HEMATOMA
 |
 |
| Epidural hematoma |
Epidural hematoma |
There is no epidural space normally in the
cranium. The dura is adherent to the skull. Fracture
of the inner table of the skull can tear arteries
and veins that run between the dura and the skull.
A blow to the head may cause instant deformation of
the skull without a fracture. This, too, can cause
vascular tears. Bleeding from these vessels lifts
the dura off of the skull forming an epidural blood
clot. Epidural hematomas develop most commonly
with fractures of the squamous portions of the temporal
and parietal bones that tear the middle meningeal vessels.
Less commonly, they result form tears of diploic veins
and dural sinuses. Epidural hematoma is seen in 2.7%
to 4% of TBI and has an overall mortality of 10%. Cranial
fractures are present in 70% to 90% of cases. Symptoms
of increased intracranial pressure in epidural hematomas
with arterial rupture usually develop within hours
after the injury. With venous bleeding,
they take longer. There is a natural epidural
space around the spinal cord. Spinal epidural hematoma
may occur as a result of trauma, but may also develop
spontaneously in patients with bleeding disorders.
SUBDURAL HEMATOMA
 |
| Subdural hematoma |
Subdural hematoma is seen in 12% to 29% of severe
TBI and and has a mortality rate of 40% to 60%. It
may occur with mild or trivial head trauma. Usually,
it is caused by
rupture of bridging (emissary) veins, which
run between the surface of the
brain and the skull and are especially numerous along
the superior sagittal sinus. Excessive movement of
the brain causes rupture of these vessels, which are
attached to the skull. Individuals with brain atrophy,
in whom the bridging veins are stretched and there
is more room for the brain to move, are especially
prone to developing subdural hematoma. Less commonly,
subdural hematomas result from rupture of arteries
that accompany bridging veins. Blood from ruptured
leptomeningeal vessels and from hemorrhagic contusions
of the brain may also get into the subdural space through
tears of the arachnoid membrane.
Subdural
hematomas raise the intracranial pressure and compress
the brain. With arterial bleeding, symptoms develop
rapidly. In many instances, especially with venous
subdurals of infants and old people, there is an interval
between trauma and the onset of symptoms. Sometimes
the preceding injury is insignificant, or no history
of trauma can be elicited.
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| Organizing subdural hematoma |
The subdural hematoma starts as a flat blood
clot between the dura and the arachnoid membrane.
Initially, it is not attached to the dura. Fibroblasts,
growing from the dura into the clot, organize it.
In 5 to 6 days, fibroblast growth causes the blood
clot to be loosely attached to the dura. In 10 to
20 days, a loose fibrous membrane is formed between
the dura and the clot
(outer membrane). Fibrous
tissue then grows around the edges of the hematoma
and along its inner surface (
inner membrane),
encapsulating it completely. Maturation
of connective tissue results, after several weeks
or months, in formation of a sac with tough fibrous
walls (
chronic subdural hematoma).
Blood in this sac is absorbed to a variable degree,
and the cavity contains clear or hemorrhagic fluid
and a loose, vascular connective tissue. Rupture
of delicate vessels may cause repeated bleeding
in the sac. Fluid may also leak into the cavity
from immature capillaries. If a large amount of
CSF enters the subdural space during the traumatic
event, it washes off the blood, and no clotting
or organization takes place. The histological appearance
of the sac is helpful in estimating the duration
of the subdural hematoma.
SUBARACHNOID HEMORRHAGE
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| Subarachnoid hemorrhage |
Subarachnoid hemorrhage
is the most frequent traumatic brain lesion. It results
from rupture of corticomeningeal vessels and from
hemorrhagic contusions of the brain. Usually it is
diffuse and does not exert localized pressure. Blood
is diluted by the CSF and does not clot unless it
is massive. A large subarachnoid hemorrhage raises
the intracranial pressure, impairs cerebral perfusion
and causes HIE. Hemoglobin released form RBCs in the
subarachnoid space triggers vascular spasm. It also
incites fibrosis of the arachnoid membrane and the
subarachnoid space, which may impair CSF circulation
leading to hydrocephalus.