Donahue D J, Sanford R A, Muhlbauer M S, Chadduck W M
Children's National Medical Center, George Washington University, Washington, DC 20010, USA.
Childs Nerv Syst. 1995 Dec;11(12):692-7. doi: 10.1007/BF00262233.
In the past, the diagnosis of "growing skull fracture" or "diastatic fracture" has included a subset of injuries better referred to as "cranial burst fracture." Cranial burst fracture, typically associated with severe injury in infants less than 1 year of age, is a closed, widely diastatic skull fracture accompanied by acute cerebral extrusion outside the calvarium. We treated 11 such infants at the LeBonheur Children's Medical Center and 2 at the Children's National Medical Center from January 1986 through December 1994. Infants ranged in age from 1 to 17 months, with an average age of 5.7 months. All presented with marked scalp swelling and a Glasgow Coma Scale score of 10 or less. Twelve had a history consistent with severe injury (motor vehicle accident, 7, abuse 5). The cause of injury in one patient remains unproven. Surgery (reduction of herniated cerebral tissue, repair of large dural laceration, and cranioplasty) was usually performed within 10 days of injury, a time period long enough to assure hemodynamic stability and resolution of acute cerebral swelling, yet sufficiently brief to avoid the chronic changes (scarring, parasitization of scalp vessels by damaged cortex) associated with a "growing skull fracture." Prompt repair of cranial burst fracture may prevent ongoing brain injury such as has been neuropathologically demonstrated in patients with "growing skull fracture." Magnetic resonance imaging establishes the diagnosis of cranial burst fracture in equivocal cases, rendering unnecessary a "waiting period" to see if scalp swelling resolves. Our experience, together with information in the neuropathological and neurosurgical literature, suggests that cranial burst fracture is associated with severe trauma, requires expeditious treatment, and has been underdiagnosed in the past, leading to "growing skull fracture," a condition requiring more extensive surgery.
过去,“生长性颅骨骨折”或“分离性骨折”的诊断涵盖了一部分更宜称为“颅骨爆裂骨折”的损伤。颅骨爆裂骨折通常与1岁以下婴儿的严重损伤相关,是一种闭合性、广泛分离的颅骨骨折,伴有急性脑实质向颅外挤压。1986年1月至1994年12月期间,我们在勒邦赫尔儿童医疗中心治疗了11例此类婴儿,在儿童国家医疗中心治疗了2例。婴儿年龄在1至17个月之间,平均年龄为5.7个月。所有患儿均表现为明显的头皮肿胀,格拉斯哥昏迷量表评分在10分及以下。12例有与严重损伤相符的病史(7例为机动车事故,5例为虐待)。1例患者的损伤原因尚未得到证实。手术(复位疝出的脑组织、修复硬脑膜大裂伤和颅骨成形术)通常在受伤后10天内进行,这段时间足以确保血流动力学稳定和急性脑肿胀消退,但又足够短以避免与“生长性颅骨骨折”相关的慢性改变(瘢痕形成、受损皮质对头皮血管的寄生)。及时修复颅骨爆裂骨折可预防持续的脑损伤,如在“生长性颅骨骨折”患者中经神经病理学证实的损伤。磁共振成像可在诊断不明确的病例中确诊颅骨爆裂骨折,无需等待观察头皮肿胀是否消退。我们的经验以及神经病理学和神经外科学文献中的信息表明,颅骨爆裂骨折与严重创伤相关,需要迅速治疗,且过去诊断不足,导致出现“生长性颅骨骨折”这种需要更广泛手术的情况。