Growing skull fractures: progressive evolution of brain damage and effectiveness of surgical treatment
- 1 June 1989
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Springer Nature in Child's Nervous System
- Vol. 5 (3) , 163-167
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00272120
Abstract
The growing skull fracture of childhood is a well-known but variously interpreted syndrome. Attempts have been made to find different pathogeneses for clinical and pathological patterns that are really successive phases of a single process, arising from the interaction of three basic conditions: (1) head injury with a large gaping fracture; (2) corresponding dural tear; (3) occurrence nearly always in infancy (the first year of life or period of maximum brain growth). This combination of factors alters the normal distribution of the intracranial pressure vectors and the fracture behaves like a “neosuture” with abnormal growth of the skull on the injured side. Simultaneously, the ventricular system tends to deform, dilating and shifting towards the side of the fracture. Three cases, successfully treated at a very late stage, are described. The good surgical results confirm the validity of the surgical method and its underlying theoretical basis.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Growing fracture of the skull and the role of computerized tomographyJournal of Neurosurgery, 1981
- An unusual case of growing fracture of the skull in childhoodBritish Journal of Surgery, 1976
- Functional Anatomy of Cranial SynostosisPediatric Neurosurgery, 1975
- Enlarging skull fractures of childhoodNeuroradiology, 1974
- The Rôle of the Skull and Dura in Experimental Feline HydrocephalusDevelopmental Medicine and Child Neurology, 1972
- Varieties of growing skull fractures in childhoodJournal of Neurosurgery, 1970
- Enlarging Skull Fractures: An Experimental StudyJournal of Neurosurgery, 1967
- Leptomeningeal Cysts of the Brain Following Trauma with Erosion of the SkullJournal of Neurosurgery, 1953
- Dr. Max A. Goldstein, 1870‐1941The Laryngoscope, 1941
- Empirical formulae for the postnatal growth of the human brain and its major divisionsExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1922