Head injury


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Bicycle helmet - proper usage
Bicycle helmet - proper usage
Concussion
Concussion
Head injury
Head injury
Indications of head injury
Indications of head injury
Intracerebellar hemorrhage - CT scan
Intracerebellar hemorrhage - CT scan
Definition

A head injury is any trauma that leads to injury of the scalp, skull, or brain. The injuries can range from a minor bump on the skull to serious brain injury.

Head injury is classified as either closed or open (penetrating).

  • A closed head injury means you received a hard blow to the head from striking an object.
  • An open, or penetrating, head injury means you were hit with an object that broke the skull and entered the brain. This usually happens when you move at high speed, such as going through the windshield during a car accident. It can also happen from a gunshot to the head.


There are several types of brain injuries. Two common types of head injuries are:

  • Concussion , the most common type of traumatic brain injury
  • Contusion, which is a bruise on the brain

See also:


Alternative Names

Brain injury; Head trauma; Contusion


Considerations

Every year, millions of people sustain a head injury. Most of these injuries are minor because the skull provides the brain with considerable protection. The symptoms of minor head injuries usually go away on their own. More than half a million head injuries a year, however, are severe enough to require hospitalization.

Learning to recognize a serious head injury, and implementing basic first aid, can make the difference in saving someone's life.

In patients who have suffered a severe head injury, there is often one or more other organ systems injured. For example, a head injury is sometimes accompanied by a spinal injury.


Causes

Common causes of head injury include traffic accidents, falls, physical assault, and accidents at home, work, outdoors, or while playing sports.

Some head injuries result in prolonged or non-reversible brain damage. This can occur as a result of bleeding inside the brain or forces that damage the brain directly. These more serious head injuries may cause:

  • Changes in personality, emotions, or mental abilities
  • Speech and language problems
  • Loss of sensation, hearing, vision, taste, or smell
  • Seizures
  • Paralysis
  • Coma


Review Date: 01/08/2007
Reviewed By: Eric Perez, MD, Department of Emergency Medicine, St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center, New York, NY. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.

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