The study presents an analysis of demographic, clinical and paraclinical characteristics of 50 cases as well as the surgical treatment results of 50 cases with traumatic intracerebral hematoma (TIH) out of 70 admitted. The men showed the greatest incidence, the male/female ratio was 5:1. Age mean was 55.3 yrs. Hematomas were caused in one third of the cases by traffic collisions, followed by severe cranial traumata associated or not with other traumatic lesions and/or preceding diseases. The most frequent location was anterior in the frontal (30%) and temporal lobes (26%). Diagnosis was confirmed by arteriography and tomography. Specific paraclinical aspects of TIH were discussed together with those of the primary intracerebral hematoma (PIH). All patients were operated on under general anesthesia. A minimum craniectomy was carried out aimed at the lesion. Surgery was planned after a full neurological examination. Postoperative mortality was increased (42%) due to the severity of trauma (88%) in patients with a Glasgow coma scale assessment under 8, to age (50% of the patients were over 50 yrs), to hematoma size (84-100% in patients with a diameter of the hematoma between 50 and 100 cu cm, and over 100 cu cm, respectively) and to the location (66% in the frontal hematomas compared to 33% in temporal ones).
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!