Cerebral contusion
You don't need to be Editor-In-Chief to add or edit content to WikiDoc. You can begin to add to or edit text on this WikiDoc page by clicking on the edit button at the top of this page. Next enter or edit the information that you would like to appear here. Once you are done editing, scroll down and click the Save page button at the bottom of the page.
| Cerebral contusion Classification and external resources | |
| ICD-10 | S06.2, S06.3 |
|---|---|
| ICD-9 | 851 |
Cerebral contusion, Latin contusio cerebri, a form of traumatic brain injury, is a bruise of the brain tissue. Like bruises in other tissues, cerebral contusion can be caused by multiple microhemorrhages, small blood vessel leaks into brain tissue. Head CT scans of unconscious patients reveal that 20% have hemorrhagic contusion.[1] Contusions are likely to heal on their own without medical intervention.[1]
Contents |
Signs and symptoms
Contusion can present with weakness, lack of motor coordination, numbness, aphasia, and memory and cognitive problems.[1] Signs depend on the contusion's location in the brain.[1]
Causes
Often caused by a blow to the head, contusions commonly occur in coup or contre-coup injuries. In coup injuries, the brain is injured directly under the area of impact, while in contrecoup injuries it is injured on the side opposite the impact.
Contusions occur primarily in the cortical tissue, especially under the site of impact or in areas of the brain located near sharp ridges on the inside of the skull. The brain may be contused when it collides with bony protruberances on the inside surface of the skull.[1] The protuberances are located on the inside of the skull under the frontal and temporal lobes and on the roof of the ocular orbit.[1] Thus, the tips of the frontal and temporal lobes located near the bony ridges in the skull are areas where contusions frequently occur and are most severe.[1] For this reason, attention, emotional and memory problems, which are associated with damage to frontal and temporal lobes, are much more common in head trauma survivors than are syndromes associated with damage to other areas of the brain.[1]
Features
Contusions, which are frequently associated with edema, are especially likely to cause increases in intracranial pressure (ICP) and concomitant crushing of delicate brain tissue. Contusions are also more likely to result in hemorrhage than is diffuse axonal injury because they occur more often in the cortex, an area with more blood vessels.[1]
Contusions typically form in a wedge-shape with the widest part in the outermost part of the brain.[1]
Multiple petechial hemorrhages
Numerous small contusions from broken capillaries that occur in grey matter under the cortex are called multiple petechial hemorrhages or multifocal hemorrhagic contusion.[1] Caused by shearing injuries at the time of impact, these contusions occur especially at the junction between grey and white matter and in the upper brain stem, basal ganglia, thalamus and areas near the third ventricle.[1][1] The hemorrhages can occur as the result of brain herniation, which can cause arteries to tear and bleed.[1] A type of diffuse brain injury, multiple petechial hemorrhages are not always visible using current imaging techniques like CT and MRI scans. This may be the case even if the injury is quite severe, though these may show up days after the injury.[1] Hemorrhages may be larger than in normal contusions if the injury is quite severe. This type of injury has a poor prognosis if the patient is comatose, even with no apparent causes for the coma.[1]
Cerebral lacerations
A cerebral laceration occurs when the tissue of the brain is mechanically cut or torn.[1] Lacerations require greater physical force to cause than contusions,[1] but the two types of injury are grouped together in the ICD-9 and ICD-10 classification systems.
Frequently occurring in the same areas as contusions, lacerations are particularly common in the lower part of the frontal lobes and the tips of the temporal lobes.[1] When associated with diffuse axonal injury, the corpus callosum and the brain stem are common locations for lacerations.[1] Lacerations are very common in penetrating and perforating head trauma and frequently accompanying skull fractures, but do not require skull fractures to form.[1] Lacerations, which may occur when brain tissue is stretched, are associated with bleeding.[1]
See also
- Traumatic brain injury
- Brain damage
- Concussion
- Diffuse axonal injury
- Intracranial hemorrhage
- Intraparenchymal hematoma
- Epidural hematoma
- Subdural hematoma
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage
References
Injuries, other than fractures, dislocations, sprains and strains (S00-T14, 850-929) | |
|---|---|
| Head (head injury) and neck | Black eye - Traumatic brain injury (Concussion, Diffuse axonal injury, Cerebral contusion, Epidural hematoma, Subdural hematoma, Subarachnoid hemorrhage) |
| Thorax (chest trauma) | Traumatic aortic rupture - Pneumothorax - Hemothorax - Hemopneumothorax - Pulmonary contusion - Cardiac tamponade - Commotio cordis |
| Abdomen, lower back, lumbar spine and pelvis | Ruptured spleen |
| Shoulder and upper arm | Rotator cuff tear |
| General | Spinal cord injury - Brachial plexus lesion
Abrasion - Blister - Bruise - Hematoma Wound - Bite |

