Mesfin Fassil B., Gupta Nishant, Hays Shapshak Angela, Margetis Konstantinos
University of Texas, Long School of Medicine
Columbia University at Bassett Medical Center, NY, USA
In the United States, traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of death and disability among children and young adults. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that there are over 1.5 million reported cases of TBI every year in the United States. TBI is classified as mild, moderate, and severe based on the Glasgow coma scale (GCS). TBI patients with a GCS of 13 to 15 are classified as mild, which includes the majority of TBI patients. Patients with a GCS of 9 to 12 are considered to have a moderate TBI, while patients with a GCS below 8 are classified as having a severe TBI. The GCS measures the following responses to 3 functions: 1. (4): spontaneous. (3): to voice. (2): to pain. (1): none. 2. (5): normal conversation. (4): oriented conversation. (3): words, but not coherent. (2): no words, only sounds. (1): none. 3. (6): normal. (5): localized to pain. (4): withdraws to pain. (3): decorticate posture. (2): decerebrate. (1): none . Diffuse axonal injury (DAI) is a type of TBI that results from a blunt injury to the brain. DAI is caused by rapid rotational or linear acceleration-deceleration forces that stretch and disconnect white-matter tracts. Although often invisible on initial CT, DAI underlies a substantial proportion of the TBI patients and is a leading determinant of prolonged coma and long-term disability. Clinically, patients with DAI can present with a spectrum of neurological dysfunction. This can range from clinically insignificant to a comatose state. However, most patients with DAI are identified to have severe TBI. Some authors have suggested the use of the term traumatic axonal injury instead of DAI, because the axonal injury in DAI is multifocal rather than diffuse. The NIH CDE repository defines traumatic axonal injury as the presence of "multiple, scattered, small hemorrhagic and/or nonhemorrhagic lesions in a more confined white matter distribution".
在美国,创伤性脑损伤(TBI)是儿童和青年死亡及残疾的主要原因。疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)估计,美国每年报告的TBI病例超过150万例。根据格拉斯哥昏迷量表(GCS),TBI分为轻度、中度和重度。GCS评分为13至15分的TBI患者被归类为轻度,这包括大多数TBI患者。GCS评分为9至12分的患者被认为患有中度TBI,而GCS评分低于8分的患者被归类为患有重度TBI。GCS评估对3项功能的以下反应:1. (4):自发。(3):对声音。(2):对疼痛。(1):无反应。2. (5):正常对话。(4):定向对话。(3):能说话,但不连贯。(2):不能说话,只有声音。(1):无反应。3. (6):正常。(5):疼痛定位。(4):对疼痛有退缩反应。(3):去皮质强直姿势。(2):去脑强直。(1):无反应。弥漫性轴索损伤(DAI)是一种由脑部钝性损伤导致的TBI类型。DAI是由快速旋转或线性加速-减速力引起的,这些力会拉伸并切断白质束。尽管在初始CT上通常不可见,但DAI是相当一部分TBI患者病情的基础,并且是长期昏迷和长期残疾的主要决定因素。临床上,DAI患者可表现出一系列神经功能障碍。这可以从临床上无明显症状到昏迷状态。然而,大多数DAI患者被确定为患有重度TBI。一些作者建议使用创伤性轴索损伤这个术语来代替DAI,因为DAI中的轴索损伤是多灶性的而非弥漫性的。美国国立卫生研究院CDE储存库将创伤性轴索损伤定义为“在更局限的白质分布区域存在多个、散在的小出血性和/或非出血性病变”。