Head Injury : Skull Fracture and ConcussionHead injury remains a significant cause of death in patients who are victims of multiple trauma (e.g. motor vehicle accidents). Several distinct types of head injury can be identified. * HEAD CONTUSION - This refers to a soft tissue injury (bruise) that does not involve the skull or brain. Bleeding from scalp lacerations can be controlled with a pressure dressing or direct pressure [with a clean cloth or gauze]. CONCUSSION - This refers to a specific clinical diagnosis where loss of consciousness, amnesia, seizure, or some combination of these conditions are present in the patient's history. This is often referred to as a brain contusion. SKULL FRACTURE - This refers to an actual break in the bones of the skull. Patients with a skull fracture will most often have an area of localized swelling and tenderness. Children under the age of 2 years can sustain a skull fracture (from a head injury) and have little or no evidence on physical examination of the head. In this special case, skull x-rays are performed so skull fracture will not be overlooked. EPIDURAL HEMATOMA and SUBDURAL HEMATOMA - These refer to specific areas of intracranial (inside the skull) bleeding. A heavy, layered sheath covers the outside of the brain, known as the dura mater. Bleeding may occur and accumulate under the dura (subdural hematoma), or outside of the dura (epidural hematoma). Both conditions require IMMEDIATE Neurosurgical intervention. Another form of intracranial bleeding, secondary to head injury, is known as subarachnoid hemorrhage. It is very important to recognize the factors which determine the severity of a head injury. FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH SERIOUS HEAD INJURY1. LOSS OF CONSCIOUSNESS - This last anywhere from 2 to 10 minutes, on average. 2. AMNESIA - This refers to an inability to remember events prior to or just after the head injury ("How did I get to the hospital?"). 3. SEIZURES - Convulsions after a head injuries are common. 4. CONFUSION - The patient is not his or her "normal" self. These patients tend to keep asking the same questions over and over, despite your answering them several times. 5. NEUROLOGIC IMPAIRMENT - This may occur may as a paralysis to one side of the body, difficulty with balance (walking), coma, or unequally dilated pupils. This is an indicator of severe injury and increases the likelihood of EPIDURAL, or SUBDURAL HEMATOMA. The above represent symptoms of SERIOUS head injury. There are also several other COMMON SYMPTOMS that are seen in most head injuries: nausea with vomiting, giddiness, and sleepiness. In conclusion, the majority of patients WITHOUT ANY of the serious features of head injury, or important clinical exam findings, do well with close observation. GUIDELINES FOR THE HEAD INJURED IN THE FIRST 24 HOURSCheckups each hour for "normal" behavior. Checkups each hour to make sure the patient can be easily awakened. Observation of the patient's ability to walk or maintain balance. Observation for nausea and vomiting (dehydration). Observation of patient's ability to converse normally and move all 4 extremities. In most cases acetaminophen or an anti-inflammatory (ibuprofen) will be adequate for pain. Avoidance of alcohol, sedatives, sleeping pills, or narcotic pain medicines is strongly advised. The effects of these agents can mask the ymptoms of a serious head injury. ALL HEAD INJURED PATIENTS REQUIRE PHYSICIAN EVALUATION
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