Current diagnosis and treatment of chronic subdural haematomas.

J Med Life

Department of Neurosurgery, University Hospital Bucharest, Romania.

Published: April 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • A developed society tends to have a growing elderly population that often faces multiple medical conditions due to longer life spans and the complexity of health issues.
  • Chronic subdural hematomas are common in neurosurgery and are particularly prevalent in older patients on anticoagulant treatment, making awareness and proper diagnosis critical for healthcare professionals.
  • While surgical treatment is generally effective, there remains a lack of consensus among neurosurgeons regarding the best techniques, with ongoing research needed to validate newer conservative treatment options.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: A developed society is usually also characterized by an elderly population, which has a continuous percentage growth. This population frequently presents a cumulus of medical pathologies. With the development of the medication and surgical treatment of different affections, the life span has increased and the pathology of an old patient has diversified as far as the cumulus of various pathological diseases in the same person is concerned. Chronic subdural pathologies represent an affection frequently met in neurosurgery practice. Any neurosurgeon, neurologist and not only, has to be aware of the possibility of the existence of a chronic subdural haematoma, especially when the patient is old and is subjected to an anticoagulant or antiaggregant treatment, these 2 causes being by far the etiological factors most frequently met in chronic subdural haematomas. With an adequate diagnosis and treatment, usually surgical, the prognosis is favorable. Although the surgical treatment presents a categorical indication in most of the cases, the fact that there are many surgical techniques, a great relapse rate, as well as the numerous studies, which try to highlight the efficiency of a technique as compared to another, demonstrate that the treatment of these haematomas is far from reaching a consensus among the neurosurgeons. The latest conservatory treatment directions are still being studied and need many years to be confirmed.

Abbreviations: CT = computerized tomography, MRI = magnetic resonance imaging.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4556906PMC

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