Literature DB >> 28155987

Traumatic basal subarachnoid haemorrhage or ruptured brain aneurysm in 16-year-old boy? - case report

Rafał Skowronek1, Mariusz Kobek1, Zbigniew Jankowski2, Ewa Zielińska-Pająk3, Artur Pałasz4, Joanna Pilch-Kowalczyk5, Rafał Kwarta1, Krystian Rygol1, Michał Szczepański1, Czesław Chowaniec1.   

Abstract

Traumatic basal subarachnoid haemorrhage (TBSAH) represents only 1.8% of all subarachnoid haemorrhage cases diagnosed during autopsy. This report presents such a case from the current practice of the authors. Sixteen-year-old boy was beaten by the aggressors. Suddenly he lost his consciousness and fall after he received a single blow in the neck. He was resuscitated immediately, but died at the scene. During the external examination we did not find any significant external injuries. Autopsy revealed large contusion of right sternocleidomastoid muscle. In the cranial cavity we found extensive subarachnoid haemorrhage, located mainly on brain basis, in the posterior cranial fossa and covering the subtentorial structures. During the preparation of blood vessels we noticed a slight change of morphology suggesting damaged vessel or aneurysm, or vascular malformation located in the basilar artery bifurcation, which was taken to detailed microscopic evaluation using the special stainings. Histological examination showed vital interruption of the basilar artery wall with massive haemorrhage, without the presence of general microscopic pathology. From the medico-legal viewpoint, to determine traumatic background of haemorrhage it is necessary to find the coexistence of the following circumstances: a sustained trauma, post-mortem findings consistent with a time of injury, the presence of temporal relationship between injury and death, and morphological vital injury of the brain vessel, as well as the absence of prior vascular malformations. For this purpose Verhoeff-van Gieson's, Masson's, Turnbull's and Gomori' histological stainings may be successfully used.

Entities:  

Keywords:  forensic neuropathology; histochemistry; neurotraumatology; histopathology

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 28155987     DOI: 10.5114/amsik.2016.62333

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Med Sadowej Kryminol        ISSN: 0324-8267


  1 in total

1.  Traumatic Subarachnoid Hemorrhage Resulting from Posterior Communicating Artery Rupture.

Authors:  Jiha Kim; Seung Jin Lee
Journal:  Int Med Case Rep J       Date:  2020-06-26
  1 in total

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