Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Chapter 17
Patho notecards
23
Other
Graduate
01/23/2012

Additional Other Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
What is the most common type of brain trauma?
Definition

Blunt or closed non-missle trauma

 

Note:

Non-missle means head strikes hard surface and brain tissue is not exposed.

Term
What is open brain trauma?
Definition

When the injury breaks the dura (is a missle trauma)

 

Examples are bullets and sharp projectiles.

 

Brain layers (DAP): dura, arachnoid, and pia matter

Term
Where are brain traumas commonly seen?
Definition

Young adults 15-35 years

Infants 6 months- 2 years

Young school age children

Adults 70 and older

(excludes neonates 1-6 months and

adults between ages 35  and 70)

 

Males 1.5x more likely in high crime areas, most prominent in African Americans

 

Term
What is the hallmark of severe brain injury?
Definition

Loss of conciousness

(greater than 6 hours)

Term
What is DAI?
Definition

Difussed Axonal Injury

 

 

Term
Define DAI.
Definition

DAI: Diffused Axonal Injury

 

Definiton:

Results from shaking, axonal damage, shearing, tearing, or stretching or nerves fibers.

 

Ex. shaken baby syndrome

This results in the greatest # of disabled survivors.

Term
What are the stats with focal injury?
Definition

50% of brain trauma causes focal injury

 

Focal injury accounts for 66% of mortality

 

Term
Define and name types of focal injury.
Definition

Definition:

Caused by blunt trauma.

Focal injury is when the impact causes contusions and bleeding.  Can progress to edema and ICF.

 

Coup: Object strikes front of head and injures directly below point of impact.

 

Contrecoup: Object strikes back of head and injury on opposite side of impact.

Term
What is the types of focal contusions?
Definition

extradural hematoma

 

subdural hematoma

 

intracranial hematoma

 

 

Term
Define extradural (epidural) hematoma.
Definition

Is usually due to an arterial tear.

 

Pressure on brain, death.

 

Is an medical emergency

 

May have periods of lucidity with progressive loss of conciousness.

Term

Define subdural hematoma.

 

 

Definition

Is caused by vein rupture.  Blood collects in space between the dura and the arachnoid layer.  Symptoms are slow to develop.

 

Common in older adults and boxers.

 

Most common cause is MVA (motor vehicle accident).

Term
Name two types of subdural hematomas.
Definition

Acute: occurs with 48 hours.

Can cause headache, drowsiness, restlesness, confusion.

Can worsen conciousness and respirations.

Often located at top of skull

 

Chronic: develops weeks to months.

Common in older adults.

Result of alcohol abuse due to falls. 

Complain of chronic headaches and site tenderness.

Term
Define intracerebral hematoma.
Definition

Associated with MVA and falls.

Creates an expanding mass from hemmorage to the hematoma.

Causes compression of brain tissue with result in edema.

 

Clinical manisfestations:

decreased LOC, increases ICP

 

Term
What are the types of DAI?
Definition

Mild Cerebral concussion (3 classes/grades)

 

Classic cerebral concussion

 

 

Term
List characteristics of cerebral concussion.
Definition

Confusion, disorientation, and varying degress of amnesia.

 

Requires close observation.

 

Most common type of brain injury.

Term

List characteristics of

a mild cerebral concussion (classes 1-3)

Definition

Temporary axonal disturbances

 

causes attention and memory deficits with no loss of conscienceness

clinical manifestations are: confusion, disorientation, varying degrees of amnesia.

Immediate onset at time of injury.

Term
Name characteristics of the classic cerebral concussion.
Definition

Classified as a grade 4

Immediate loss of consciousness with in 6 hours.

Can be complicated or non complicated focal injury.

Disconnect of the cerbral and the brain stem reticular activating system. (RAS)

Physiologic and neurologic disfunction with out substantial anatomic disruption.

Retrograde and antrograde amnesia.  

 

Term
Characteristics of post concussive syndrome.
Definition

Clinical manifestations

-headache

-cognigative imperment

-psychological complaint

-somatic complaints

-crainial nerve signs and symptoms

-treatment

relief of symptoms and reassurance

-close observation for 24hrs.

Term
Characteristics of spinal cord trauma.
Definition

-spinal cord trauma effects 11,000 people per yr.

-injury to vertireble and neuro tissues

-caused by compression pulling shearing forces

-effects most mobile vertibre (c1-c2, c4-c7, t1-l2)

 

Term
Types of vetibral injuries
Definition

-simple fracture

-compressed fracture

-comminuted fracture

-dislocation

most common in young men

 

Term
Characteristics of spinal chord injury
Definition
Supporting users have an ad free experience!