Odd head injury
Mike
mmackinnon at cox.net
Fri Sep 1 08:41:05 BST 2006
How about diabetes insipidus? I know it typically takes days but is there
anychance it could be accelerated by dehydration from alcohol anyway? Not
sure if thats possible to get this bad this quick with DI.
Common with head injury, ADH goes through the roof then confused?
What was his urine specific gravity and osmo? How about BUN:Cr?
Guy is dehydrated then has a head inj. ADH high losing fluids like crazy
with a shift intracellular and all the sudden you have cerebral edema.
Dunno, this is a shot in the dark.
m
----- Original Message -----
From: <Walter.Mauritz at auva.at>
To: <trauma-list at trauma.org>
Sent: Thursday, August 31, 2006 11:40 PM
Subject: RE: Odd head injury
Dean,
what was the alcohol level (or serum osmo)?
If he had a couple of drinks just before the accident the full effect of
alcohol intoxication may not have been apparent at admission.
best wishes
Walter Mauritz MD PhD
Professor of Anesthesia and Critical Care Medicine
Trauma Hospital "Lorenz Boehler"
A - 1200 Vienna, AUSTRIA, EU
phone: ++43 1 33110 789
fax: ++43 1 33110 277
e-mail: walter.mauritz at auva.at
-----Original Message-----
From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org
[mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of Hardcastle, Tim, Dr
<tch at sun.ac.za>
Sent: Friday, September 01, 2006 6:59 AM
To: Trauma & Critical Care mailing list
Subject: RE: Odd head injury
Dean
All I could suggest is rapidly reversing DAI, which is not usually
visible on CT. Did he get a re-scan after the GCS drop or was that the
first scan. Last q - did you check for "tik" drug?
Tim
Dr T C Hardcastle
M.B.,Ch.B.(Stell); M.Med(Chir); FCS(SA)
Senior Surgeon / Senior Lecturer: Surgery (Trauma and ICU)
ATLS instructor and DSTC Cape Town Course Director
Intern program Coordinator: Surgery
Program Manager: Emergency Medicine (SU)
Clinical Head (Director): Diana Princess of Wales Trauma Unit
Department of Surgery Room 4064
Tygerberg Hospital / University of Stellenbosch
PO Box 19063
Tygerberg 7505
Western Cape
South Africa
e-mail: tch at sun.ac.za
Cell: +27824681615
Office: +27219389281 or 4911 pager 0302
-----Original Message-----
From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org
[mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org]On Behalf Of Dean Lutrin
Sent: Friday, September 01, 2006 1:44 AM
To: 'Trauma & Critical Care mailing list'
Subject: Odd head injury
Dear Listmembers
I would like an opinion on a recent case I saw. Young male thrown off a
bridge - didn't get any more details. Came in slightly confused (GCS
14/15)
with a a fractured wrist and ankle. It was one of those nights in a
Johannesburg trauma unit and I had to run off to sort out another
patient
and I left my patient with one of the interns. I wasn't too worried
about
him compared with the other patients I had to sort out. Came back to him
an
hour later and he was comatose. GCS 3/15. Intubated without drugs. CT
brain
normal. Nothing else on imaging aside from wrist and ankle. Ventilated
overnight with good spontaneous respiratory effort and reactive pupils.
GCS
still 2/10. Next day started waking up quite nicely. Extubated 36 hours
after initial injury with full recollection of everything up to arrival
at
hospital. Resources didn't allow me to CT again before extubation. Full
toxic screen negative, but patient was drunk.
Questions
1. was this just a concussion?
2. I have never seen a patient drop to 3/15 from 14/15 with a normal CT
and
then have a full recovery. Is it common?
3. Anything else could have caused it?
Thanks
Dean Lutrin
JHB, SA
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