出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2018/11/11 04:09:41」(JST)
Subdural hematoma | |
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Synonyms | Subdural haematoma, subdural haemorrhage |
Subdural hematoma as marked by the arrow with significant midline shift | |
Specialty | Neurosurgery |
A subdural hematoma (SDH), is a type of hematoma, usually associated with traumatic brain injury. Blood gathers between the inner layer of the dura mater and the arachnoid mater. Usually resulting from tears in bridging veins which cross the subdural space, subdural hemorrhages may cause an increase in intracranial pressure (ICP), which can cause compression of and damage to delicate brain tissue. Subdural hematomas are often life-threatening when acute. Chronic subdural hematomas, however, have a better prognosis if properly managed.
In contrast, epidural hematomas are usually caused by tears in arteries, resulting in a build-up of blood between the dura mater and skull. Subarachnoid hemorrhage, the third type of brain hemorrhages, is bleeding into the subarachnoid space — the area between the arachnoid membrane and the pia mater surrounding the brain.
Hematoma type | Epidural | Subdural
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Location | Between the skull and the outer endosteal layer of the dura mater | Between dura mater and arachnoid mater.[1] |
Involved vessel | Temperoparietal locus (most likely) - Middle meningeal artery Frontal locus - anterior ethmoidal artery Occipital locus - transverse or sigmoid sinuses Vertex locus - superior sagittal sinus |
Bridging veins |
Symptoms (depend on severity)[2] | Lucid interval followed by unconsciousness | Gradually increasing headache and confusion |
CT appearance | Biconvex lens | Crescent-shaped |
Symptoms of subdural hemorrhage have a slower onset than those of epidural hemorrhages because the lower pressure veins bleed more slowly than arteries. Therefore, signs and symptoms may show up in minutes, if not immediately[3] but can be delayed as much as 2 weeks.[4] If the bleeds are large enough to put pressure on the brain, signs of increased ICP (intracranial pressure) or damage to part of the brain will be present.[5]
Other signs and symptoms of subdural hematoma can include any combination of the following:
Subdural hematomas are most often caused by head injury, when rapidly changing velocities within the skull may stretch and tear small bridging veins. Subdural hematomas due to head injury are described as traumatic. Much more common than epidural hemorrhages, subdural hemorrhages generally result from shearing injuries due to various rotational or linear forces.[5][6] Subdural hemorrhage may be seen in shaken baby syndrome, in which similar shearing forces may cause retinal hemorrhages. Subdural hematoma is also commonly seen in the elderly and in alcoholics, who have evidence of cerebral atrophy. Cerebral atrophy increases the length the bridging veins have to traverse between the two meningeal layers, hence increasing the likelihood of shearing forces causing a tear. It is also more common in patients on anticoagulants or antiplatelet drugs, such as warfarin and aspirin. Patients on these medications can have a subdural hematoma after a relatively minor traumatic event. A further cause can be a reduction in cerebral spinal fluid pressure which can create a low pressure in the subarachnoid space, pulling the arachnoid away from the dura mater and leading to a rupture of the blood vessels.
Factors increasing the risk of a subdural hematoma include very young or very old age. As the brain shrinks with age, the subdural space enlarges and the veins that traverse the space must travel over a wider distance, making them more vulnerable to tears. This and the fact that the elderly have more brittle veins make chronic subdural bleeds more common in older patients.[7] Infants, too, have larger subdural spaces and are more predisposed to subdural bleeds than are young adults.[5] For this reason, subdural hematoma is a common finding in shaken baby syndrome. In juveniles, an arachnoid cyst is a risk factor for a subdural hematoma.[8]
Other risk factors for subdural bleeds include taking blood thinners (anticoagulants), long-term alcohol abuse, dementia, and the presence of a cerebrospinal fluid leak.[9]
Acute subdural haematoma is usually caused external trauma that creates tension in the wall of a bridging vein as it passes between the arachnoid and dural layers, i.e. the subdural space, of the brain's lining. This is because in the short course of the vein in the subdural space, circumferential arrangement of collagen surrounding the vein causes it to be susceptible to tear by this tension. However, intracerebral hemorrhage and rupture of cortical vessels (vessels running on the surface of the brain) can also cause subdural haematoma. Such haematoma usually accumulates in between the two layers of the dura membrane. Such haematoma can cause ischemic brain damage by two mechanisms: pressure effect on the cortical blood vessels,[10] and vasoconstriction due to the substances may be released from the collected material in a subdural hematoma, causing further ischemia under the site by restricting blood flow to the brain.[11] When the brain is denied adequate blood flow, a biochemical cascade known as the ischemic cascade is unleashed, and may ultimately lead to brain cell death.[12] This condition lead to higher risk of death for the patient.[10]
Subdural haematoma may continually grow in size by the pressure effect of the haematoma on the brain. This causes the intracranial pressure of the brain to rise, squeezing the intracranial blood into the dural venous sinuses, raising the dural venous pressure, and resulting in more bleeding from the ruptured bridging veins. Subdural haematoma only stopped to enlarge when the pressure of the haematoma equalises with the intracranial pressure of the brain, as the space for haematoma expansion getting smaller and smaller.[10]
Chronic subdural haematoma is usually asymptomatic until four to seven weeks later. In this case, accumulation of blood in the dural space is caused by inflammation. Trauma causes damage to the dural border cells (e.g. separation of dura membrane bilayer), resulting in inflammatory reaction.[13] Post craniotomy for unruptured intracranial aneurysm is another risk factor for the development of chronic subdural haematoma. The incision of arachnoid membrane during the operation causes leakage of CSF into the subdural space, leading to inflammation. This post-operative complication would usually resolved spontaneously.[14] Inflammation causes the new membrane formation through fibrosis. The inflammatory process also produces new fragile and leaky blood vessels through angiogenesis, permitting the leakage of red blood cells, white blood cells, and plasma into the haematoma cavity and easily causes mirco bleeds. Besides, tearing of arachnoid mater during trauma causes leakage of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) into the haematoma cavity, causing increase in haematoma size over time. Excessive fibrinolysis is another factor that causes continuous bleeding. Examples of pro-inflammatory mediators acted in the haematoma expansion process are: Interleukin 1α (IL1A), Interleukin 6, Interleukin 8; while the anti-inflammatory mediator is Interleukin 10. Mediators that promote angiogenesis are: angiopoietin and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Meanwhile, prostaglandin E2 promotes the expression of VEGF. Matrix metalloproteinases remove surrounding collagen, thus providing space for new blood vessels to grow.[13]
It is important that a person receive medical assessment, including a complete neurological examination, after any head trauma. A CT scan or MRI scan will usually detect significant subdural hematomas.
Subdural hematomas occur most often around the tops and sides of the frontal and parietal lobes.[5][6] They also occur in the posterior cranial fossa, and near the falx cerebri and tentorium cerebelli.[5] Unlike epidural hematomas, which cannot expand past the sutures of the skull, subdural hematomas can expand along the inside of the skull, creating a concave shape that follows the curve of the brain, stopping only at the dural reflections like the tentorium cerebelli and falx cerebri.
On a CT scan, subdural hematomas are classically crescent-shaped, with a concave surface away from the skull. However, they can have a convex appearance, especially in the early stage of bleeding. This may cause difficulty in distinguishing between subdural and epidural hemorrhages. A more reliable indicator of subdural hemorrhage is its involvement of a larger portion of the cerebral hemisphere since it can cross suture lines, unlike an epidural hemorrhage. Subdural blood can also be seen as a layering density along the tentorium cerebelli. This can be a chronic, stable process, since the feeding system is low-pressure. In such cases, subtle signs of bleeding such as effacement of sulci or medial displacement of the junction between gray matter and white matter may be apparent.
Age | Attenuation (HU) |
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First hours | +75 to +100[15] |
After 3 days | +65 to +85[15] |
After 10-14 days | +35 to +40[16] |
Fresh subdural bleeding is hyperdense, but becomes more hypodense over time due to dissolution of cellular elements. After somewhere between 3–14 days, the bleeding becomes isodense with brain tissue and may therefore be missed.[17] Subsequently, it will become more hypodense than brain tissue.
Subdural hematomas are divided into acute, subacute, and chronic, depending on the speed of their onset.[18] Acute subdural hematomas that are due to trauma are the most lethal of all head injuries and have a high mortality rate if they are not rapidly treated with surgical decompression.[19]
Acute bleeds often develop after high speed acceleration or deceleration injuries and are increasingly severe with larger hematomas. They are most severe if associated with cerebral contusions.[5] Though much faster than chronic subdural bleeds, acute subdural bleeding is usually venous and therefore slower than the typically arterial bleeding of an epidural hemorrhage. Acute subdural bleeds have a high mortality rate, higher even than epidural hematomas and diffuse brain injuries, because the force (acceleration/deceleration) required to cause them causes other severe injuries as well.[20] The mortality rate associated with acute subdural hematoma is around 60 to 80%.[21]
Chronic subdural bleeds develop over a period of days to weeks, often after minor head trauma, though such a cause is not identifiable in 50% of patients.[7] They may not be discovered until they present clinically months or years after a head injury.[22] The bleeding from a chronic bleed is slow, probably from repeated minor bleeds, and usually stops by itself.[6][11] Since these bleeds progress slowly, they present the chance of being stopped before they cause significant damage. Small chronic subdural hematomas, those less than a centimeter wide, have much better outcomes than acute subdural bleeds: in one study, only 22% of patients with chronic subdural bleeds had outcomes worse than "good" or "complete recovery".[5] Chronic subdural hematomas are common in the elderly.[22]
Treatment of a subdural hematoma depends on its size and rate of growth. Some small subdural hematomas can be managed by careful monitoring as the clot is eventually resorbed naturally. Other small subdural hematomas can be managed by inserting a temporary small catheter through a hole drilled through the skull and sucking out the hematoma; this procedure can be done at the bedside. Large or symptomatic hematomas require a craniotomy, the surgical opening of the skull. A surgeon then opens the dura, removes the blood clot with suction or irrigation, and identifies and controls sites of bleeding.[23][24] Postoperative complications include increased intracranial pressure, brain edema, new or recurrent bleeding, infection, and seizure. The injured vessels must be repaired.
Depending on the size and deterioration, age of the patient, and anaesthetic risk posed, subdural hematomas occasionally require craniotomy for evacuation; most frequently, simple burr holes for drainage; often conservative treatment; and rarely, palliative treatment in patients of extreme age or with no chance of recovery.[25]
In those with a chronic subdural hematoma, but without a history of seizures, the evidence is unclear if using anticonvulsants is harmful or beneficial.[26]
. The possibility of direct effect of some vasoactive substances released by the blood clot, being responsible for the ischaemia, seems attractive.
Classification | D
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External resources |
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Subdural hematoma. |
Cardiovascular disease (heart) (I00–I52, 390–429) | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Ischaemic |
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Conduction / arrhythmia |
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Cardiomegaly |
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Other |
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Nonmusculoskeletal injuries of head (head injury) and neck (S00–S19, 850–854) | |||||
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Intracranial |
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Extracranial/ facial trauma |
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Either/both |
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Cerebrovascular diseases (G45–G46 and I60–I69, 430–438) | |||||||
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Brain ischemia/ cerebral infarction (ischemic stroke/TIA) |
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Intracranial hemorrhage (hemorrhagic stroke) |
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Aneurysm |
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Other/general |
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リンク元 | 「急性硬膜下血腫」「acute subdural hemorrhage」 |
関連記事 | 「acute」 |
CTにおける血腫の像 | 発症後の意識 | 好発部位 | |
急性硬膜外血腫 | 凸レンズ | 約6時間の意識清明期を経て意識障害 | 側頭葉 |
急性硬膜下血腫 | 凹レンズ | 意識回復がないことが多い |
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