Articles: brain-injuries.
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Biography Historical Article Classical Article
First published record of a neurosurgical procedure on the North American continent, Mexico City, by Pedro Arias de Benavides, 1561: Secretos de Chirurgia, Valladolid, Spain, 1567.
The first published account of a neurosurgical intervention performed on the North American continent is described. The operation took place in Mexico City in 1561. The neurosurgical intervention was performed by a Spanish surgeon, Pedro Arias de Benavides, on a 13-year-old boy who had sustained head trauma that caused an open depressed cranial fracture and exposed the cerebrum. A description of this case was first published in Valladolid, Spain, 6 years after the event, in a book entitled Secretos de Chirurgia ("Secrets of Surgery").
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Chinese Med J Peking · Jul 2000
dl-3-n-butylphthalide reduces brain damage in mice with closed head injury.
To investigate the protective effect of dl-3-n-butylphthalide (NBP) as an anti-cerebral ischemic drug on brain damage 24 h after closed head injury in mice. ⋯ NBP provides therapeutic response in experimental closed head injury.
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The goal of this study was to determinate the positive predictive values of selected clinical signs for skull base fractures and associated intracranial lesions. ⋯ Our data demonstrated that the selected signs of skull base fractures have high positive predictive values for the presence of skull fracture and intracranial lesions, even in those patients classified in the Glasgow Coma Scale between 13 and 15. This indicates that all patients with the selected clinical signs should be submitted to computerized tomography of skull and with bone window, with the aim to detect associated lesions.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jun 2000
Review Practice Guideline GuidelineThe Brain Trauma Foundation. The American Association of Neurological Surgeons. The Joint Section on Neurotrauma and Critical Care. Nutrition.
Data show that starved head-injured patients lose sufficient nitrogen to reduce weight by 15% per week. Class II data show that 100-140% replacement of resting metabolism expenditure with 15-20% nitrogen calories reduces nitrogen loss. Data in non-head injured patients show that a 30% weight loss increased mortality rate. ⋯ The data strongly support feeding at least by the end of the first week. It has not been established that any method of feeding is better than another or that early feeding prior to 7 days improves outcome. Based on the level of nitrogen wasting documented in head-injured patients and the nitrogen sparing effect of feeding, it is a guideline that full nutritional replacement be instituted by day 7.