American Journal of Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery
Articles Information
American Journal of Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery, Vol.2, No.1, Jan. 2016, Pub. Date: Jan. 12, 2016
Post - Traumatic Thick Acute Subdural Hematoma in Child Showing Rapid Deterioration Managed with Burr - Hole Evacuation Surgery with Drain: A Novel Rescue Technique
Pages: 18-21 Views: 2228 Downloads: 1040
Authors
[01] Guru Dutta Satyarthee, Department of Neurosurgery, Neurosciences Centre, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India.
[02] Gopal K., Department of Neurosurgery, Neurosciences Centre, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India.
Abstract
Children with post-traumatic intracranial haematoma causing mass lesion need surgical evacuation. Usually craniotomy is the preffered method and different approaches are decompressive craniotomy, hinge cranioplasty after hematoma evacuation or evacuation of acute subdural hematoma (ASDH) with expansile duraplasty. However all these procedure are time -consuming, require general fitness of anaesthesia and normalisation of raised of intracranial pressure following haematoma evacuation may not occur till dural opening, which is approximately an hour after beginning of scalp incision till raising bone flap, and most important is the availability of operation theatre and anaesthetist dedicated for that case, and excessive patient load with limited operation theatre facility and lack of trained anaesthetist in developing country with resource constrained and limited skilled man power. Authors report an interesting case a 2-year child, who had thick fronto-temporoparietal acute thick subdural hematoma following trauma , was initially planned for decompressive craniotomy, however, he developed rapid neurological deterioration, so he was taken up for surgery in between scheduled routine cases. He underwent brurrhole evacuation of ASDH and drain placement. After hematoma evacuation, he was kept on ventilatory support for three days. The postoperative noncontract CT scan head revealed complete evacuation of ASDH with no residual hematoma and subsidence of complete mass effect with opening of Sylvian fissure, sulci and basal cisterns. A subgroup of cases may possess a special challenge in the management, who develop very rapid deterioration in the current neurological status while awaiting in the emergency for surgical intervention. [1, 2] Overall the prognosis of ASDH is usually unfavourable in the cases of head injury associated with coagulant disorder and associated intracerebral contusion and laceration. [3] Authors advocates an emergent burr- hole with drainage tube placement technique for evacuation of thick acute subdural hematoma, as an alternative method in the desperate situation of non-availability of routine operation theatre in attempt to save life and halt progression of the secondary brain injury.
Keywords
Acute Subdural Hematoma, Rapid Neurological Deterioration, Burr Whole Surgery, Pediatric Age
References
[01] Parslow RC, Morris KP, Tasker RC, Forsyth RJ, Hawley CA. UK peadiatric traumatic brain injury study steering group, epidemiology of traumatic brain injury in children receiving intensive care in the UK. Arch Dis Child 2005; 90:1182-7.
[02] Ewing-Cobbs L, Prasad M, Kramer L, Louis PT, Baumgartner J, Fletcher JM, et al. Acute neuroradiologic findings in young children with inflicted or noninflicted traumatic brain injury. Childs Nerv Syst 2000; 16:25-33.
[03] Vinchon M, Defoort-Dhellemmes S, Desurmont M, Dhellemmes P. Accidental and nonaccidental head injuries in infants: A prospective study. J Neurosurg 2005; 102:380-4.
[04] Meservy CJ, Towbin R, McLaurin RL, Myers PA, Ball W. Radiographic characteristics of skull fractures resulting from child abuse. AJR Am J Roentgenol 1987; 149:173-5.
[05] Vance BM. Ruptures of surface blood vessels on cerebral hemispheres as a cause of subdural hemorrhage. AMA Arch Surg 1950; 61:992-1006.
[06] Gennarelli TA, Thibault LE. Biomechanics of head injury. In: Wilkins RH, Rengachary SS, editors. Neurosurgery. 1st ed. New York: McGraw Hilb; 1985. p. 1531-36.
[07] Stalhanimer D. Experimental models of head injury. Acta Neurochir Suppl (Wien) 1986;36:33-46.
[08] Motohashi O: Single burr hole evacuation of traumatic ASDH of posterior fossa in emergency room, J Neurotrauma. 2002; 19:993-938.
[09] Koc RK, Akdemir H, Oktem IS, Meral M, Menku A: Acute subdural hematoma: Outcome and outcome prediction, Neurosurg Rev 1997; 20:239-244.
[10] Youichi Yanagawa, Toshihisa Sakamoto: Results of Single Burr Hole Drainage for Acute Subdural Hematoma with Non-Reactive Pupil. Turk Neurosurg 2012; 22(2):196-9.
[11] Satyarthee GD, Chouskey P, Singh P, Agrawal D, Gujar H. Emergent burr-hole drainage of traumatic acute subdural hematoma with drain placement in pre-existing coagulopathy showing rapid neurological deterioration: A novel technique. Indian J Neurotrauma. 2015; 12:19-22.
600 ATLANTIC AVE, BOSTON,
MA 02210, USA
+001-6179630233
AIS is an academia-oriented and non-commercial institute aiming at providing users with a way to quickly and easily get the academic and scientific information.
Copyright © 2014 - American Institute of Science except certain content provided by third parties.