Results 291 to 300 of about 72,166 (324)

Growing Skull Fractures

Southern Medical Journal, 1977
Four cases of growing skull fracture in children are presented and the reasons for poor surgical results are analyzed. The clinical presentation, causative factors, and operative findings are discussed.
L C, Hellbusch, R H, Moiel, W R, Cheek
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Everted Skull Fracture

World Neurosurgery, 2011
Skull bone fractures are common in trauma. They are usually linear undisplaced or depressed; however, a distinct possibility of elevated fracture remains. We describe an entity of everted fracture skull in which the fracture segment is totally everted.
Srikant, Balasubramaniam   +2 more
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Growing Skull Fractures

Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 1966
SUMMARYTwo patients that presented with growing skull fractures of childhood are described, and one further example was discovered among 26 infants and children under the age of 10 years with simple linear fractures of the calvarium admitted to the General Infirmary at Leeds in 1956–1960.
C J, Vas, J M, Winn
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Growing skull fractures

Child's Nervous System, 2006
Growing skull fractures are a rare complication of head injuries (Ersahin et al. in Neurosurg Rev 23:139-144, 2000; Hayashi et al. in Childs Nerv Syst 13:349-351, 1997; Ramamurthi and Kalyanaraman in Neurosurgery 32:427-430, 1970; Zegers et al. in Eur J Pediatr 162:556-557, 2003).
V, de P Djientcheu   +6 more
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Contrecoup skull fractures

Journal of Neurosurgery, 1975
✓ The authors describe the frequency, pathological features, and significance of contrecoup fractures of the anterior cranial fossae, which occur commonly when falls with occipital or temporal impacts cause fatal head injuries.
C S, Hirsch, B, Kaufman
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Anterior Skull Base Fractures

Facial Plastic Surgery, 2005
Anterior skull base trauma evaluation and management has historically been difficult to systematically study secondary to the relative rarity of its occurrence, associated major morbidity and high mortality, and poor radiographic techniques. It has only been recently that improved care has allowed for decreased morbidity and mortality.
Matthew A, Kienstra, Harry, Van Loveren
openaire   +2 more sources

Compound depressed skull fracture

Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians, 1976
Although compound depressed skull fractures are common and their management and diagnosis have been described at length, their occurrence following dog bites is unusual. The case of an 18-month-old infant with this injury as a complication of multiple dog bites in the facial and head regions is described with the treatment employed.
W D, O'Riordan, D V, Hubbell
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Intrauterine growing skull fracture

Child's Nervous System, 1990
Growing skull fractures with development of leptomeningeal cysts are rare complications of head injuries and have not been described in the perinatal period. The case history of a newborn with bilateral parietal fractures and the formation of a leptomeningeal cyst on one side detected at birth is presented.
S D, Moss   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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