Expanding pneumocephalus due to craniofacial fractures: A case report.

Int J Surg Case Rep

Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Hasanuddin University, Makassar, Indonesia. Electronic address:

Published: September 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Pneumocephalus (PNC) is the presence of air in the skull, primarily caused by head injuries or surgery, leading to characteristic imaging findings like the "Mount Fuji sign."
  • A case study of a 57-year-old man showed that he developed severe PNC after a motorcycle accident, requiring surgical intervention to drain the air and repair cranial defects, ultimately improving his symptoms.
  • The study emphasizes the challenge of diagnosing PNC, as it can be subtle at first, and endorses the use of pericranial flaps for effective surgical repair with lower infection rates compared to synthetic options.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Pneumocephalus (PNC) is the presence of air in the intracranial cavity. The most frequent cause is craniofacial trauma, though there are many etiologies, including surgical procedures. PNC with compression of the frontal lobes and widening of the interhemispheric space between the tips of the frontal lobes results in the characteristic radiological finding of the "Mount Fuji sign".

Presentation Of Case: A 57-year-old man presented to the A&E with loss of consciousness due to a motorcycle collision 9 h prior. He had a GCS of E4M6V5, and a head CT scan revealed minimal PNC forming in both hemispheres. After discharge, severe headaches and rhinorrhea developed. A second CT scan revealed a massive PNC. An operation was then performed via a bicoronal incision to drain the PNC and seal the cranial defect. A burr hole in the calvarium was created, and the cranial defect was closed using a pericranial rotational flap. Post-operation, the patient's headache and rhinorrhea decreased; neither symptom was present at 1-month post-operation. The wounds healed with minimal scarring, and the cosmetic outcome for the craniofacial fracture was acceptable.

Discussion: Although the patient may at first present with a mild head injury, this can progress into something much more serious. PNC is difficult to diagnose clinically. Rarely, patients describe a splashing sound upon moving the head (termed bruit hydro-aerique), which can also be auscultated. A head CT scan is the gold standard in the diagnosis of PNC. Pericranial flaps are widely used for dural repair because they are easily accessible and have a lower rate of infection than artificial grafts on expanding PNC.

Conclusion: Tension PNC may be slow-growing and increase intracranial pressure to high levels before clinical signs are present. The pericranial rotational flap technique is the best way to close a dura mater defect in cranial base fractures with tension PNC.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8379274PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijscr.2021.106314DOI Listing

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