Term
What is the big difference between TBI motor involvement, and stroke probs? |
|
Definition
TBI more likely to be B and strokes are usually unilateral. |
|
|
Term
What are the major risk factors for TBI? (5) |
|
Definition
Age, gender, socioeconomic status, alcohol use, high impact activities |
|
|
Term
What age groups are most at risk for TBI? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Which gender is most likely to sustain TBI? |
|
Definition
males (engage in riskier behaviors) |
|
|
Term
How is socioeconomic status and TBI risk correlated? |
|
Definition
Lower socioeconomic status ~ increased risk for TBI |
|
|
Term
What is the leading cause for TBI? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are the prognosticators (who will do better after TBI)? (5) |
|
Definition
Gender (F), Severity of initial injury (glasgow coma scale high score), Post traumatic amnesia (shorter duration), duration of unconsciousness following injury (shorter), physiologic measures (lower ICP). |
|
|
Term
What is retrograde amnesia? |
|
Definition
Loss of memory of events that happened just before the injury. It's common for these memories never to return. |
|
|
Term
What is the difference between open head and closed head injuries? |
|
Definition
In an open head injury there is a skull fracture involved. CHI = no skull fracture. |
|
|
Term
What is a depressed skull fracture? |
|
Definition
Bony fragments go into brain tissue ie: hit w/ hammer. |
|
|
Term
What is a puncture skull fracture? |
|
Definition
Something goes cleanly through the bone. ie: stabbing |
|
|
Term
What are the three major types of CHI pathology? |
|
Definition
Acceleration-dececeleration, vascular injury, hypoxic injury. |
|
|
Term
Describe acceleration-decceleration injury. Describe the type of damage it causes within the brain tissue. |
|
Definition
The skull stops, but the brain keeps going and gets pounded on the front/back/side of the inside of the skull. It causes sheer force on neurons and axons, and pulls on axons and vessels causing tearing. |
|
|
Term
Describe the damage caused by vascular CHI. |
|
Definition
When there is bleeding in the brain, there is an ischemic response which causes vasospasm and further injury. You can also have compression injury from the blood volume, and shift in tissue can increase damage. |
|
|
Term
how does hypoxic CHI occur? |
|
Definition
Blood doesn't get to where it has to go - either by blood damage in the brain or major blood loss in another part of the body, and causes hypoxic damage. |
|
|
Term
What is diffuse axonal injury? |
|
Definition
Diffuse degeneration of white matter; the damage is not localized to any one area. |
|
|
Term
What are the three types of head injury? |
|
Definition
Open head, closed head and traumatic injury to extracranial blood vessels. |
|
|
Term
what are the major additional complications from brain injury? (2) |
|
Definition
swelling in the brain and increased intracranial pressure. |
|
|
Term
What causes increased intracranial pressure? |
|
Definition
fluid in the brain, caused by the normal response of swelling. |
|
|
Term
what is a normal icp value? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Over what pressure is icp abnormal? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
An ICP of >40mmHg results in what? |
|
Definition
Impairment in electrical activity. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
At what ICP do you absolutely stop PT Tx because of potential damage? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
You're Txing a pt, and their ICP goes up higher than you are comfortable with. What is the first step you should take? What if that doesn't work? |
|
Definition
First step - raise the head of the bed. 2nd step - get nurse immediately. |
|
|
Term
high ICP can result in herniations. where? |
|
Definition
foramen magnum, tentorial hernia, csf spaces. |
|
|
Term
What is a tentorial hernia? |
|
Definition
hernia in tissue above the cerebellum |
|
|
Term
describe what csf space herniation looks like. |
|
Definition
on MRI or CT - ventricles are squished or non-visible b/c tissue pushes into that space. |
|
|