CNS Trauma Overview - Impact Insights
- Primary Injury: Immediate mechanical damage from impact (e.g., Diffuse Axonal Injury, contusion).
- Secondary Injury: Delayed cascade; key mediators: hypoxia, hypotension, excitotoxicity (glutamate), inflammation, edema.
- Monro-Kellie Doctrine: $V_{intracranial} = V_{brain} + V_{blood} + V_{CSF} + V_{lesion}$ = constant. Explains ↑ICP.
- GCS (Eye, Verbal, Motor): Assesses severity. Mild: 13-15; Moderate: 9-12; Severe: ≤8.
⭐ Secondary brain injury, driven by factors like hypoxia, hypotension, and excitotoxicity, is a major determinant of outcome post-TBI and a key target for neuroprotective strategies.

Skull & Scalp Trauma - Cranial Crack Chronicles
- Scalp Layers 📌 SCALP:
- Skin
- Connective tissue (dense)
- Aponeurosis (galea)
- Loose areolar tissue (danger area due to spread of infection)
- Pericranium

- Skull Fractures:
- Linear: Most common; simple break.
- Depressed: Bone fragment pushed inwards. Significant if depression >1 bone thickness.
- Comminuted: Multiple bone fragments.
- Basilar: Fracture at skull base. Key signs:
- Battle's sign (mastoid ecchymosis)
- Raccoon eyes (periorbital ecchymosis)
- CSF rhinorrhea/otorrhea
- Hemotympanum
⭐ Basilar skull fractures often present with 'Raccoon eyes' (periorbital ecchymosis) and 'Battle's sign' (mastoid ecchymosis), indicating fracture of the anterior or middle cranial fossa respectively.
Intracranial Hemorrhages - Hemorrhage Hotspots
- Key types of traumatic intracranial bleeds:
| Feature | Epidural Hematoma (EDH) | Subdural Hematoma (SDH) | Traumatic Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (tSAH) | Intracerebral Hemorrhage (ICH) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Source | Skull fracture | Head movement (acceleration/deceleration) | Direct trauma, vessel rupture | Direct trauma, contusion |
| Vessel | Middle Meningeal Artery (MMA) | Bridging Veins | Cortical arteries/veins, aneurysms | Small intraparenchymal vessels |
| CT Shape | Biconvex / Lentiform (Lens-shaped) | Crescent-shaped (Concavo-convex) | Blood in sulci, cisterns, fissures | Hyperdense lesion within parenchyma |
| Clinical | Lucid interval, rapid deterioration | Acute: ↓LOC; Chronic: gradual, elderly/infant | Severe headache, meningismus, ↓LOC | Focal deficits, ↓LOC, ↑ICP |

⭐ An epidural hematoma (EDH) classically presents with a 'lucid interval' after initial loss of consciousness, followed by rapid neurological decline, and appears as a biconvex (lentiform) hyperdensity on CT scan.
- Intracerebral/Intraparenchymal Hemorrhage: Often associated with coup (at site of impact) and contrecoup (opposite site of impact) injuries. Can be single or multiple. Location varies (frontal/temporal lobes common).
Parenchymal Injury & Sequelae - Core Carnage Consequences
- Concussion: Transient LOC; reversible functional disturbance.
- Contusion: Brain bruise (hemorrhage, necrosis).
- Coup (impact site) & Contrecoup (opposite site).

- Coup (impact site) & Contrecoup (opposite site).
- Laceration: Tissue tearing; often with penetrating trauma/depressed skull fractures.
- Diffuse Axonal Injury (DAI):
- Shearing forces → widespread axonal damage.
- Punctate hemorrhages (corpus callosum, brainstem).
- $\beta$-APP stain highlights axonal swellings.
⭐ Diffuse Axonal Injury (DAI) is characterized by widespread damage to axons in the white matter, often not visible on initial CT but a major cause of coma and poor outcome; $\beta$-amyloid precursor protein ($\beta$-APP) immunohistochemistry highlights axonal swellings (retraction balls) within hours to days.
- Herniation Syndromes (↑ICP):
- Subfalcine: Cingulate gyrus under falx → ACA compression.
- Transtentorial (Uncal): Uncus through tentorial notch → CN III palsy, PCA compression, Duret hemorrhages.
- Tonsillar: Cerebellar tonsils through foramen magnum → Brainstem compression (cardiorespiratory arrest). 📌 "CUT the CONE" (Cingulate, Uncal, Tonsillar).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Epidural Hematoma (EDH): Middle meningeal artery rupture, lucid interval, lentiform (biconvex) CT.
- Subdural Hematoma (SDH): Bridging veins tear, crescentic CT, common in elderly/alcoholics.
- Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (SAH): Ruptured berry aneurysm, "worst headache of life", bloody CSF.
- Diffuse Axonal Injury (DAI): Shearing forces (acceleration-deceleration), widespread axonal damage, often normal CT.
- Brain Herniation: Critical complication of ↑ICP; e.g., uncal, subfalcine, tonsillar.
- Coup-Contrecoup Injury: Brain contusions at impact site and directly opposite_site_
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