Literature DB >> 9488300

Compound anterior cranial base fractures: classification using computerized tomography scanning as a basis for selection of patients for dural repair.

D E Sakas1, D J Beale, A A Ameen, H L Whitwell, K W Whittaker, A J Krebs, K H Abbasi, P S Dias.   

Abstract

OBJECT: A classification is proposed to organize anterior cranial base fractures systematically according to their location and size. The goal of this study was to determine whether these two variables, irrespective of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) rhinorrhea, are related to the long-term risk of posttraumatic meningitis and, hence, to standardize decision making concerning surgical repair of associated CSF fistulas.
METHODS: With the aid of high-resolution thin-section coronal computerized tomography (CT) scanning, anterior cranial base fractures were classified into the following four major types: I, cribriform; II, frontoethmoidal; III, lateral frontal; and IV, complex (any combination of the other three types). Fractures with a maximum bone displacement that extended farther than 1 cm in any plane were classified as "large" and those less than 1 cm as "small." The authors used this classification in a study of 48 patients who were treated by conservative (20 patients) or surgical (28 patients) means. The results showed a gradation of risk: the fracture most likely to develop infection was a large cribriform (Type I) and the least likely was a small lateral frontal (Type II). Statistical analysis showed that the trend for an increased infection rate was related to the cumulative effect of three variables in the following order: 1) prolonged duration of rhinorrhea (analysis of variance [ANOVA], p = 0.017); 2) large size of fracture displacement (ANOVA, p = 0.079); and 3) fracture's proximity to the midline (ANOVA, p = 0.015).
CONCLUSIONS: In this series, microsurgical repair was accompanied by a minimum complication rate. Hence, the authors recommend that patients with fractures that combine the aforementioned variables should be considered to have a high long-term risk of infection and their injury should be surgically repaired as soon as the posttraumatic edema has subsided. This applies to the following fractures: large cribriform (Type I) with transient rhinorrhea lasting 5 to 8 days and large frontoethmoidal (Type II) with prolonged rhinorrhea lasting longer than 8 days. Furthermore, the authors conclude that this classification can improve the management of posttraumatic CSF fistulas of the anterior cranial base and may provide insights into the mechanisms underlying their spontaneous repair and susceptibility to meningitis.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9488300     DOI: 10.3171/jns.1998.88.3.0471

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosurg        ISSN: 0022-3085            Impact factor:   5.115


  12 in total

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4.  Postmortem grading of cerebral contusions : A proposed modification of the adams' contusion index with re-definition of anatomic markers.

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6.  A management algorithm for cerebrospinal fluid leak associated with anterior skull base fractures: detailed clinical and radiological follow-up.

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Review 7.  Frontal Sinus Fractures: Evolving Clinical Considerations and Surgical Approaches.

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9.  Contemporary Trends in the Management of Posttraumatic Cerebrospinal Fluid Leaks.

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Review 10.  Skull Base Trauma: Clinical Considerations in Evaluation and Diagnosis and Review of Management Techniques and Surgical Approaches.

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