Back to Search Start Over

Transcranial Brainstem Stab Injuries: A Retrospective Analysis of 17 Patients

Authors :
Hemraz Boodhoo
Steven R. Naidoo
Eleanor Gouws
Narendra Nathoo
S S Nadvi
Source :
Neurosurgery. 47:1117-1123
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2000.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Transcranial stab injuries remain a frequent cause of emergent neurosurgical admissions to neurosurgical units in South Africa. Brainstem stabs are an uncommon, yet often fatal, form of brain injury. METHODS A retrospective audit of 597 patients with transcranial stab injuries admitted to our unit over a 12-year period (January 1987 to December 1998) identified 17 patients (2.85%) with brainstem stab injuries. The computed tomographic scans of all patients were analyzed, and a detailed autopsy examination of the skull and its contents was performed in all patients who died. Stepwise linear regression analysis was used to formulate a predictive model of outcome for the entire series of 597 patients. RESULTS The majority of the patients were males (16 patients), and the study group had a mean age of 28.65 ± 9.59 years and a mean Glasgow Coma Scale score of 8.59 ± 2.76. Knives (82%) were the most common instruments of penetration. Cerebral angiography identified 3 patients with vascular abnormalities, and autopsy revealed an additional 4 patients with vascular injury. Emergency ventriculostomy was performed in 10 patients for obstructive hydrocephalus. Four of the 17 patients survived (76.5% mortality). Factors significantly predictive of outcome in patients with transcranial stab injuries were the Glasgow Coma Scale score (F = 43.7), the occurrence of intraventricular hemorrhage (F = 22.8), the type of associated lesion (intracranial bleed, vascular abnormality, or brain abscess) (F = 5.9), and the number of operations (F = 3.2). CONCLUSION The Glasgow Coma Scale score is the most significant predictor of outcome in low-velocity transcranial stab injuries. Brainstem stab injuries have a great propensity for vascular damage. Survivors are incapacitated by severe, fixed neurological deficits.

Details

ISSN :
15244040 and 0148396X
Volume :
47
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurosurgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e05b19e4f15d716e5658d5fe94a70547
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/00006123-200011000-00018