| Literature DB >> 8437654 |
T Y Chen1, C W Wong, C N Chang, T N Lui, W C Cheng, M D Tsai, T K Lin.
Abstract
Seventy-four patients with a traumatic epidural hematoma (EDH) and a Glasgow Coma Scale score of more than 12 received expectant treatment; 14 subsequently underwent surgical evacuation of the EDH. A patient with initial brain computed tomograms (CT) showing an EDH volume of more than 30 ml, a thickness of more than 15 mm, and a midline shift beyond 5 mm tended to require surgery within 3 days of the injury when the brain had exhausted its compensatory mechanism and yielded to the expanding EDH. After the 3-day period, in the absence of neurological symptoms, the presence of the EDH may not be an indication for surgical evacuation or hospitalization beyond 7 days. In our patients, the presence of a skull fracture in the temporal bone, the heterogeneous density of the EDH in the CT scan, or the 6-hour period between the CT study and the injury did not significantly increase the failure rate of nonsurgical treatment. Although a zero mortality was achieved in this series, these guidelines may not be applicable to the management of an infratentorial EDH.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1993 PMID: 8437654 DOI: 10.1227/00006123-199302000-00004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurosurgery ISSN: 0148-396X Impact factor: 4.654