Epidural hemorrhage

Revision as of 17:45, 16 March 2015 by Neil.m.young (talk | contribs) (dispo added)

Background

  • Occur as a result of blood collecting between the skull and the dura mater
  • Generally associated with blunt trauma to the temporal or temporoparietal region
  • Most commonly secondary to a tear of the middle meningeal artery
  • There is a high incidence of associated skull fractures (>75%) and additional cerebral injuries (intraparenchymal hemorrhage, cerebral contusion, contrecoup injuries, subdural hematoma, subarachnoid hemorrhage)


Diagnosis

  • Any patient with a neurologic deficit, depressed GCS, palpable skull fracture, or worrisome mechanism will warrant a non-contrast head CT after initial stabilization and resuscitation.
  • Canadian CT Head Rule for patients with minor head injury
    • Can be used to decide which minor injuries will require head CT
  • Findings on CT are, classically, a lens (or lemon-shaped) shaped hyperdense lesion with sharp margins in the temporoparietal region
    • Blood along the inside of the skull will not cross the sutures. This helps differentiate acute epidural hematoma from acute subdural hematoma.

Workup

Workup

  • Consider head CT (rule out intracranial hemorrhage)
    • Use validated decision rule to determine need
    • Avoid CT in patients with minor head injury who are at low risk based on validated decision rules.[1]
  • Consider cervical and/or facial CT
  • Appropriate trauma resuscitation of all patients with head trauma
  • A thorough neurologic examination of any patient with head trauma BEFORE administration of RSI
  • Head CT for high-risk patients


Differential Diagnosis

Intracranial Hemorrhage Types

Management

  • Emergent neurosurgical evacuation
  • Bilateral trephination (burr holes) if neurosurgery is unavailable

Disposition

  • Transfer to tertiary medical center
  • Admission to NS or Trauma Surgery

See Also

External Links

References

  • Stiell IG, Wells GA, Vandemheen K, et al. The Canadian CT Head Rule for patients with minor head injury. Lancet. 2001;357(9266):1391-6.
  • Judith E. Tintinalli, Gabor Kelen, J. Stephan Stapczynski. SAMJ. New York : McGraw-Hill, Medical Pub. Division, c2004.; 2008.
  • Irie F, Le Brocque R, Kenardy J et-al. Epidemiology of traumatic epidural hematoma in young age. J Trauma. 2011;71 (4): 847-53.

Further Reading