Huang Wei, Li Jun, Wang Wen-Hao, Zhang Yuan, Luo Fei, Hu Lian-Shui, Lin Jun-Ming
Department of Neurosurgery, The 909th Hospital, School of Medicine, Xiamen University, Zhangzhou, China.
Front Neurol. 2023 Apr 17;14:1141395. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2023.1141395. eCollection 2023.
Hemispherical cerebral swelling or even encephalocele after head trauma is a common complication and has been well elucidated previously. However, few studies have focused on the secondary brain hemorrhage or edema occurring regionally but not hemispherically in the cerebral parenchyma just underneath the surgically evacuated hematoma during or at a very early stage post-surgery.
In order to explore the characteristics, hemodynamic mechanisms, and optimized treatment of a novel peri-operative complication in patients with isolated acute epidural hematoma (EDH), clinical data of 157 patients with acute-isolated EDH who underwent surgical intervention were reviewed retrospectively. Risk factors including demographic characteristics, admission Glasgow Coma Score, preoperative hemorrhagic shock, anatomical location, and morphological parameters of epidural hematoma, as well as the extent and duration of cerebral herniation on physical examination and radiographic evaluation were considered.
It suggested that secondary intracerebral hemorrhage or edema was determined in 12 of 157 patients within 6 h after surgical hematoma evacuation. It was featured by remarkable, regional hyperperfusion on the computed tomography (CT) perfusion images and associated with a relatively poor neurological prognosis. In addition to concurrent cerebral herniation, which was found to be a prerequisite for the development of this novel complication, multivariate logistic regression further showed four independent risk factors contributing to this type of secondary hyperperfusion injury: cerebral herniation that lasted longer than 2 h, hematomas that were located in the non-temporal region, hematomas that were thicker than 40 mm, and hematomas occurring in pediatric and elderly patients.
Secondary brain hemorrhage or edema occurring within an early perioperative period of hematoma-evacuation craniotomy for acute-isolated EDH is a rarely described hyperperfusion injury. Because it plays an important prognostic influence on patients' neurological recovery, optimized treatment should be given to block or reduce the consequent secondary brain injuries.
头部外伤后半球性脑肿胀甚至脑膨出是一种常见并发症,此前已有充分阐述。然而,很少有研究关注在手术清除血肿期间或术后极早期,在手术清除的血肿下方脑实质内局部而非半球性发生的继发性脑出血或水肿。
为探讨单纯急性硬膜外血肿(EDH)患者围手术期一种新并发症的特点、血流动力学机制及优化治疗,回顾性分析157例行手术干预的急性单纯性EDH患者的临床资料。考虑的危险因素包括人口统计学特征、入院时格拉斯哥昏迷评分、术前失血性休克、硬膜外血肿的解剖位置和形态学参数,以及体格检查和影像学评估中脑疝的程度和持续时间。
结果显示,157例患者中有12例在手术清除血肿后6小时内出现继发性脑出血或水肿。其特征是在计算机断层扫描(CT)灌注图像上有明显的局部高灌注,且与相对较差的神经预后相关。除了发现同时存在脑疝是这种新并发症发生的先决条件外,多因素逻辑回归进一步显示了导致这种继发性高灌注损伤的四个独立危险因素:持续时间超过2小时的脑疝、位于非颞叶区域的血肿、厚度超过40毫米的血肿以及发生在儿童和老年患者中的血肿。
急性单纯性EDH血肿清除开颅手术围手术期早期发生的继发性脑出血或水肿是一种很少被描述的高灌注损伤。由于它对患者神经功能恢复有重要的预后影响,应给予优化治疗以阻断或减少随之而来的继发性脑损伤。