| Literature DB >> 25973216 |
Alexios Bimpis1, Hani J Marcus1, Mark H Wilson1.
Abstract
Traumatic bilateral extradural haematoma resulting from injury to the superior sagittal sinus is rare; in such cases, early surgical evacuation of the haematoma and control of bleeding from the sinus can achieve an excellent patient outcome.Entities:
Keywords: bifrontal; bilateral; epidural; extradural; haematoma
Year: 2015 PMID: 25973216 PMCID: PMC4429041 DOI: 10.1177/2054270415579137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JRSM Open ISSN: 2054-2704
Figure 1.(a) Preoperative axial computed tomography head demonstrating bifrontal extradural haematoma with underlying complex skull vault fractures including a right temporoparietal depressed skull fracture, and a fracture line extending across the midline, (b) preoperative computed tomography head 3D reconstruction and (c) postoperative computed tomography head demonstrating evacuation of the haematoma.
Figure 2.Intraoperative image demonstrating preservation of the midline skull vault and use of dural tenting sutures.
Summary of cases with bilateral extradural resulting from sagittal sinus injury.
| Citation | Study group | Presentation | Management | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bimpis[ | 32-year-old male | GCS 3 | Surgery (dura hitched around sinus) | GOS 5 |
| Udoh[ | 20-year-old male | GCS 8 | Surgery | GOS 5 |
| Mishra[ | Four males, aged 22–33 years | GCS 8–13 | Surgery (sinus repaired) | GOS 5 in all cases |
| Görgülü3 | Unknown (single case in series) | GCS 9 | Surgery | GOS 5 |
| Kett-White[ | 26-year-old male | Seizures | Surgery (dura hitched around sinus) | GOS 3 |
GCS = Glasgow Coma Scale score; GOS = Glasgow Outcome Scale score.