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Management of head injury in a neurosurgical unit in India
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Journal of Trauma & Treatment

ISSN: 2167-1222

Open Access

Management of head injury in a neurosurgical unit in India


4th Annual Congress and Medicare Expo on Trauma & Critical Care

February 22-23, 2018 | Paris, France

Sandeep Inchanalkar

Life Line Trauma, Brain and Spine Centre, India

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Trauma Treat

Abstract :

Approximately, one million patients present to hospital each year having suffered a head injury. The majority of these patients have minor (GCS 13-15) or moderate injuries (GCS 9-12) and approximately half or less than 16 years. Old males are 2-3 times more likely to have a head injury than females. Head injury is associated with tremendous mortality and morbidity. The head injuries are classified according to the nature of insult (penetrating or blunt) concomitant injuries (isolated or multiple traumas) and the timing (primary or secondary). The Glasgow coma scale (GCS) remains the most commonly used method of assessing the severity of the head injury. Pathophysiologically, it can be cerebral contusions, diffuse axonal injury, subarachnoid hemorrhage, fracture and epidural and subdural hematomas. The five key principles that should guide the management of the head injury patients in ICU are norm tension, normoxia, normocapnia, normothermia and normoglycemia, management involves medical and surgical treatment. Medical management includes positioning, sedation ventilation, ABG management, mannitol (ICP reduction agents), sugar control, temperature regulation and good nursing care. Surgical management includes CSF drainage, craniotomy, lobectomy decompression, etc. Head injury is not a static event that occurs at time zero and recovers to normal at defined later time point. It is a dynamic process that changes over days, weeks and months after the event and outcome cannot be assessed at least 6 months after the head injury. Management of head injury needs a disciplined and team approach for better outcome.

Biography :

Sandeep Inchanalkar is presently a leading Neurosurgeon in Maharashtra, India. His widely acclaimed mission is to bring healthcare of international standards within the reach of individual. He is an MBBS, MS, DNB and MCh (Neurosurgery) at Bombay Hospital and has done Fellowship in Minimal Invasive Brain and Spine Surgery. He is a Member of Neurological Society of India and presented paper in several national conferences. He was Organizing Secretary and Joint Secretary of Neurological Surgeon’s Conference 2015 and 2016.
 

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 1048

Journal of Trauma & Treatment received 1048 citations as per Google Scholar report

Journal of Trauma & Treatment peer review process verified at publons

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