J Korean Neurosurg Soc.  1985 Dec;14(4):729-736.

Basal Skull Fracture: Clinical Analysis of 160 Cases

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neurosurgery, Presbyterian Medical Center, Chon ju, Korea.

Abstract

Although the presence of a linear fracture involving the cranial vault is very often of no slinical significance, the same is not true of fracture of the base. The authors analyzed 160 cases of basal skull fracture treated in the department of Neurosurgery, presbyterian Medical center from May 1980 to Apr 1985. Clinical features and radiological findings were reviewed, analyzed and correlated each other. The result of the analysis are summarized as follow : 1) The basal skull fractures were more common in man than woman the ratio of 13:3. 2) Clinical features were otorrhea(61.2%), racoon eye(22.5%), and hearing loss(20%) etc in decreasing order. 3) Combined pathologies were skull fracture(45%), subdural hematoma(13.7%), epidural hematoma(11.2%), and pneumocephalus(10%) etc. in decreasing order. 4) The facial nerve, vestibulo-cochlear nerve, and olfactory nerve were most common cranial nerves injured. 5) Among the visible fractures in simple X-ray, longitudinal fractures were more common than transverse fractures. 6) CSF leakage were noted in 126 cases, and among them immediate type was far more common(93.6%) than delayed type. 7) Incidence of meningitis was 5%, and most of them were associated with CSF leakage. 8) The infection rate was higher when the CSF leak persisted over 7 days.

Keyword

Basal skull fracture; CSF leakage; Meningitis

MeSH Terms

Cranial Nerves
Facial Nerve
Female
Hearing
Humans
Incidence
Meningitis
Neurosurgery
Olfactory Nerve
Pathology
Protestantism
Skull Fractures*
Skull*
Full Text Links
  • JKNS
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr