This retrospective analysis describes the clinical characteristics, treatment, and outcome of 19 patients aged 80 years or older with odontoid fractures. The fractures were due to falls in 15 patients (78.9%) and were associated with motor-vehicle accidents in four. Type III fractures were seen in three patients and type II fractures in 16. No patient suffered a neurological injury associated with the fracture. Five patients (26.3%) died during hospitalization; factors contributing to their death included prolonged bed rest, associated injuries, and concomitant medical illnesses. The mean follow-up period in the remaining 14 patients was 28.8 months (range 5 to 72 months). Eight patients with a posterior displacement of 5 mm or less were treated with cervical immobilization, three of whom showed a stable non-union of the fracture site at follow-up review. One patient with 10-mm displacement refused operative treatment. Three of the patients without surgical treatment subsequently died from unrelated causes; all remaining patients resumed their routine activity. Five patients with displacement of 5 mm or greater and instability at the fracture site were treated with posterior cervical fusion of C1-2 using wire and autologous iliac bone grafts. In this group, no operative morbidity or mortality occurred and stable constructs developed in all patients; one patient died from an unrelated cause during the follow-up period and the other patients resumed their normal activity. Prolonged bed rest caused respiratory complications in two of six patients who survived initial hospitalization; two of three patients treated with rigid immobilization developed complications that required alternative treatments.
This clinical experience indicates that rFVIIa may be safe and effective as the initial hemostatic agent for rapid reversal of orally administered anticoagulation medications in patients who require urgent neurosurgical intervention.
A retrospective analysis was undertaken in a consecutive series of 33 full-term infants (birth weight > 2500 g and a minimum of 37 weeks gestational age) with symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) admitted to a regional neonatal intensive care unit from January 1986 to December 1992. Eleven infants were born in our institution; 17 were male. The estimated local incidence of symptomatic ICH for the inborn population was 4.9/10000 live births, with a regional incidence of 2.7/10000 live births. Twenty-four (72.3%) infants presented with seizures, apnea, or respiratory distress. Five (15.1%) children developed ICH associated with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, ventriculoperitoneal shunting, and cardiac surgery. There were two deaths (6.1%) associated with a grade IV periventricular hemorrhage (PVH) and cardiac surgery. Nine infants (27.3%) showed PVH, while an additional nine children developed multifocal cortical hemorrhages. Eight infants (24.2%) showed extra-axial ICH, four children (12.1%) sustained lobar hemorrhages, and three children (9.1%) showed ICH associated with prenatal CNS abnormalities. Excluding five children with iatrogenic ICH, coagulopathies occurred in 9 of 28 infants (32.1%) and constituted a major determinant of the development of ICH. Neurosurgical intervention was limited to one infant with massive ICH and one child with hydrocephalus as a late sequela of ICH. Developmental follow-up was complete in 32 children with a mean and median duration of 3.4 years. Full-term infants with ICH associated with risk factors for hypoxic-ischemic injury showed a significantly greater risk of developmental delay compared to infants with uncomplicated ICH.
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