Of 26 patients with CT confirmed intracerebellar haematoma, 17 had ventricular drainage performed and 7 patients had the haematoma evacuated. Eleven patients died. Mortality was clearly related to state of consciousness. Seven out of 8 non-comatose patients survived but 10 out of 18 comatose patients died. As there was no incidence of deterioration immediately following placement of a ventricular drainage, the actual risk of upward transtentorial herniation seemed low. Absence of evoked potentials in 6 patients accurately predicted a fatal outcome but normal SEP and BAEP were of lesser value for predicting survival.
Traumatic lesions of the brain stem are of two types: primary, which are considered to be caused at the moment of impact, and secondary, associated with supratentorial mass lesion. Of the 239 patients with a serious head injury who showed a severe disturbance of consciousness upon admission and who had CT scan carried out immediately, 21 cases were considered to have a primary brain stem lesion with initial CT scan. A primary brain stem lesion was found in 21 of 239 (8.8%) of patients with serious head injury. Their injuries were caused primarily by traffic accidents. Sixteen of the 21 cases showed not only brain stem lesions but also other brain injuries such as cerebral contusion of the white and gray matter, callosal injury, intraventricular hemorrhage, and subarachnoid hemorrhage, which are considered to be caused by a diffuse shearing injury. Five cases who showed a single injury to the brain stem with no other brain lesions were considered to have a pure brain stem lesion. Primary brain stem lesions were observed on the dorsal side of the midbrain, where they can be differentiated from secondary brain stem lesions. These lesions are considered to result from the shearing mechanism in and around the brain stem very close to the tentorial edge, or to an injury of the lower brain stem by hyperextension of the cervical vertebrae. The prognosis of patients with a primary brain stem lesion was usually unfavorable, except in those with a single brain stem lesion.
The first day of the symposium was devoted to coma (J. Brihaye); the second day dealt with injury scalling (S. Lindgren and G. Stroobandt); the third day was concerned with brain death (E. A. Walker and E. Pillen) but no firm conclusion was reached and another meeting on brain death was planned in near future.
Microsurgical end-to-end anastomosis of the carotid artery of the rat is discussed. The continuous-suture technique is found to be less time consuming than the interrupted-suture technique. Comparison of the flow rate of each anastomosis doesn't reveal a marked difference. Patency rate of each technique is 100%.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.