Cerebral hemisphere swelling in severe head injury patients
- PMID: 3189019
- DOI: 10.1007/978-3-7091-8975-7_9
Cerebral hemisphere swelling in severe head injury patients
Abstract
The clinical course and the intracranial pressure (ICP) changes in 66 severe head injury patients presenting bulk enlargement of one cerebral hemisphere within a few hours of trauma have been analyzed. These patients represent 11% of a series of 589 severe head injury cases studied with computerized tomography (CT). Cerebral hemisphere swelling, which was associated with an ipsilateral subdural haematoma of variable extent in 58 patients (88%), or a large epidural haematoma in 5 patients (7%), and occurred as an isolated lesion in 3 patients (4%), carried the highest incidence of uncontrollable intracranial hypertension, the highest mortality rate and the shortest survival period after trauma in the authors' severe head injury series. The high incidence of arterial hypotension and/or hypoxaemia at admission (48% of cases), and the severity of clinical presentation (82%) of patients scored 5 patients or less in the Glasgow Coma Scale, 77% had uni- or bilateral mydriasis and 82% initial ICP above normal limits) correlated with the very poor final outcome (85% mortality). Only one of the 12 patients with normal initial ICP continued to have low pressure throughout the course. High dose thiopental failed to control severe intracranial hypertension in 29 patients (44%) who had a fulminant, malignant course. A transient decrease in ICP elevation was achieved in 17 patients (26%) and a definitive control in 12 patients (18%), among them the 10 survivors in this series. In the authors experience once ICP is controlled, and unless haemodynamic instability compells action to the contrary, barbiturate should not be discontinued until a control CT scan shows complete disappearance of the mass effect.