AI Article Synopsis

  • Contusions and lacerations of the frontal lobes are common, accounting for 43.4% of traumatic brain mass lesions, and their clinical and pathological data are closely analyzed.
  • Surgical outcomes for frontal masses are similar to those in the temporal lobes, with current indications for surgery being limited to cases that result in significant intracranial hypertension.
  • Overall, brain contursion and laceration syndromes should not be viewed as separate from head injuries but rather as part of a spectrum of varying severity, affecting potential treatment approaches.

Article Abstract

Contusions and lacerations of the frontal lobes are very frequent; 43.4% in the whole series of traumatic brain mass lesions. Clinical ICP, CT scan data and neuropathological findings in patients with such lesions are analysed and correlated. Moreover, the clinical features and the outcome of frontal masses undergoing surgery are also compared with similar lesions located in the temporal lobes. Frontal lesions cannot be differentiated on purely clinical grounds and the factors governing the outcome in both lactations are the same. On the whole, surgical indications nowadays seem to be rather rare; only lesions behaving truly as expanding lesions with obvious intracranial hypertension benefiting from surgery. Brain contusion-laceration syndromes in general can no longer be considered separate entities. Neither should they be included in the miscellaneous group of "traumatic intracranial mass lesions", since the pathophysiological significance of purely extracerebral effusions is entirely different. Traumatic contusions and lacerations and/or intracerebral haematomas, whether frontal or located elsewhere, should instead, be considered in the context of head injuries of a different degree of gravity, as having collateral features which, on occasion, may call for surgical management.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01402210DOI Listing

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