Abstract | OBJECTIVE: METHODS: Data in the Japan Neurotrauma Data Bank were reviewed for 1,002 patients with severe head injury treated at hospitals between 1998 and 2001 (ASDH, n=246; DBI, n=341). Clinical variables including mechanisms of injury were evaluated. RESULTS: Patients with DBI were significantly younger, with higher incidence of skull fracture, lower Glasgow coma scale score and higher injury severity score than patients with ASDH. Different mechanisms of injury were involved, with ASDH occurring much more commonly in non-vehicular injuries, particularly falls (47.2%), while DBI resulted almost exclusively from vehicular injuries (79.7%). Impact sites on the head with ASDH were more commonly occipital or temporal, while those for DBI were frontal, temporal or facial. Alcohol use was involved in 13.8% of drivers with ASDH and 33.6% of drivers with DBI. CONCLUSION: The principal mechanical damage in DBI was to the brain itself, while primary damage in ASDH occurred to surface blood vessels. ASDH and DBI remain the two worst and most-important types of traumatic brain injury, although the pathogenesis differs with age and mechanism injury.
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Authors | Satoshi Sawauchi, Shigeyuki Murakami, Takeki Ogawa, Toshiaki Abe |
Journal | No shinkei geka. Neurological surgery
(No Shinkei Geka)
Vol. 35
Issue 7
Pg. 665-71
(Jul 2007)
ISSN: 0301-2603 [Print] Japan |
PMID | 17633509
(Publication Type: English Abstract, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
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Topics |
- Accidental Falls
(statistics & numerical data)
- Accidents, Traffic
(statistics & numerical data)
- Brain Injuries
(epidemiology, etiology, mortality)
- Databases as Topic
- Databases, Factual
- Female
- Glasgow Coma Scale
- Hematoma, Subdural, Acute
(epidemiology, etiology, mortality)
- Humans
- Injury Severity Score
- Japan
(epidemiology)
- Male
- Middle Aged
- Skull Fractures
(epidemiology)
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