Extradural Haemorrhage

Collection of blood between the skull and the dura mater

Aetiology

  • Typically follows a linear skull vault fracture tearing a branch of the middle meningeal artery

Clinical presentation

  • A characteristic picture is that of a head injury with a brief duration of unconsciousness, followed by improvement (lucid interval)
  • The patient then becomes stuporose; there is an ipsilateral dilated pupil and contralateral hemiparesis, with rapid transtentorial coning
  • Bilateral fixed, dilated pupils, tetraplegia and respiratory arrest follow

Investigations

  • Urgent CT brain - described as a lens shaped lesion (biconvex)
notion image

Management

  • Urgent neurosurgery