Postoperative Extradural Hematomas: Computed Tomographic Survey of 1105 Intracranial Operations

Author:

Fukamachi Akira1,Koizumi Hidehito2,Nagaseki Yoshishige1,Nukui Hideaki1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Yamanashi Medical College, Yamanashi-ken, Maebashi, Japan

2. Department of Neurosurgery, Gunma University School of Medicine, Maebashi, Japan

Abstract

Abstract We reviewed the computed tomographic findings after 1055 intracranial operations to determine the incidence of postoperative extradural hematomas. There were 11 medium and 5 large hematomas after 1055 operations (1.0%). Ten of the 16 hematomas were operated upon (10/1055, 0.9%). Four of the 10 hematomas were seen after 278 brain tumor removals (1.4%), another four after 190 aneurysmal operations (2.1%), one after 14 intracerebral hematoma removals (7.1%), and the last one after 251 ventricular shunting or drainage procedures (0.4%). In 4 of the 10 operated hematomas, sites were regional, in five sites were adjacent, and in one the site was distant. All of the five adjacent hematomas extended downward from a lower rim of the operative locus. Causes were analyzed in the three types of the hematomas. In case of the regional hematomas, the causes were incomplete hemostasis of the dura mater or the bone in all four patients, nonperformance of central stay sutures in three, systemic hypertension in one, and hypofibrinogenemia in one. In the adjacent hematomas, we could find dural separation at an edge of craniotomy in all five patients, abrupt collapse of the brain in all, ventricular dilatation in two, and systemic hypertension during immediate postoperative period in two. In one distant hematoma, ventricular dilatation and ventricular shunting procedure were themselves thought to be the causal factors.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Surgery

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