Head - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 35
About This Presentation
Title:

Head

Description:

Headache, tinnitus, nausea, irritability, confusion, dizziness, loss of ... hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, anomalous origin of the coronary artery, and Marfan's syndrome ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:37
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 36
Provided by: stan93
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Head


1
Head
2
Skull Fracture
  • Etiology
  • Blunt trauma or a fall from a height
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Severe headache and nausea palpation may reflect
    a defect such as a skull indentation there may
    be blood in the middle field, blood in the ear
    canal, bleeding through the nose, ecchymosis
    around the eyes (raccoon eyes) or ecchymosis
    behind the ears (battle sign) cerebral spinal
    fluid may appear in the ear canal and nose
  • Treatment
  • Hospitalization and neurosurgeon referral

3
Cerebral Concussions(Mild Head Injuries)
  • Etiology
  • Blunt trauma or a fall from a height
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Headache, tinnitus, nausea, irritability,
    confusion, dizziness, loss of consciousness,
    posttraumatic (anterograde) amnesia, retrograde
    amnesia, concentration difficulty, blurred
    vision, photophobia, sleep disturbance
  • Treatment
  • Athlete is removed from play. May return to play
    if asymptomatic for 20 minutes.

4
Head Injury Guidelines
5
Post-Concussion Syndrome
  • Etiology
  • Poorly understood condition that occurs following
    a concussion
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Athlete complains of a range of post-concussion
    problems, including persistent headache, impaired
    memory, lack of concentration, anxiety and
    irritability, giddiness, fatigue, depression and
    visual disturbances. These symptoms may begin
    immediately or within several days following the
    initial trauma and may last for weeks or even
    months before resolving.
  • Treatment
  • Athlete is removed from play until all symptoms
    of this condition have resolved.

6
Second Impact Syndrome
  • Etiology
  • Rapid swelling and herniation of the brain after
    a second head injury that occur before the
    symptoms of a previous head injury have resolved.
    The second impact may be relatively minor and, in
    some cases, may not even involve a blow to the
    head
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Often, the athlete does not even lose
    consciousness and may look stunned. The athlete
    may remain standing and be able to leave the
    playing field under his or her own power.
    However, within 15 seconds to several minutes,
    the athletes condition worsens rapidly, with
    dilated pupils, loss of eye movement, loss of
    consciousness leading to coma, and respiratory
    failure. This is a life-threatening situation!
  • Treatment
  • Emergency hospitalization. The best treatment is
    prevention.

7
Cerebral Contusion
  • Etiology
  • Blunt trauma
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Athlete may experience a loss of consciousness
    but subsequently becomes very alert and
    talkative. A neurological exam will be normal,
    however, symptoms such as headaches, dizziness,
    and nausea will persist
  • Treatment
  • Hospitalization

8
Epidural Hematoma
  • Etiology
  • A blow to the head or a skull fracture causing a
    tear of the menigeal arteries which are embedded
    in the bony grooves of the skull
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Athlete may experience a loss of consciousness
    but subsequently becomes lucid and show few or
    none of the symptoms of a serious head injury.
    Gradually symptoms begin to worsen and the
    athlete begins to experience severe head pain
    dizziness, dilation of the pupil (usually on the
    same side of the injury), and sleeplessness. This
    can degrade into a life-threatening situation.
  • Treatment
  • Hospitalization

9
Subdural Hematoma
  • Etiology
  • Occur more frequently than an epidural hematoma
    results from acceleration/deceleration forces
    that tear vessels that bridge the dura mater and
    the brain.
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Athlete may loose consciousness the athlete may
    experience severe headache dizziness, dilation
    of the pupil (usually on the same side of the
    injury), and sleepiness. This can degrade into a
    life-threatening situation.
  • Treatment
  • Hospitalization

10
Malignant Brain Edema Syndrome
  • Etiology
  • Occurs within minutes to hours after head trauma
    and is caused by an intracerebral clot that
    results in diffuse brain swelling with little or
    no brain injury.
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Rapid neurologic deterioration from a normal
    alert state that progresses to a coma and
    occasionally death.
  • Treatment
  • Emergency hospitalization

11
Migraine Headaches
  • Etiology
  • Athlete has a history of repeated minor blows to
    the head or who has sustained a major cerebral
    injury the exact cause is unknown, but the
    condition is believed to be a vascular disorder
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Flashes of light, blindness in half the field of
    vision (hemianopia), and paresthesia thought to
    be caused by vasoconstriction of intercerebral
    vessels. The athlete complains of a severe
    headache that is diffused throughout the head and
    often accompanied by nausea and vomiting. There
    is evidence of a familial predisposition.
  • Treatment
  • Medication

12
Scalp Injuries
  • Etiology
  • Blunt or penetrating trauma
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Possible bleeding, pain, and point tenderness
  • Treatment
  • Pressure with a sterile gauze, cleanse the wound
    thoroughly, then dress. Possible physician
    referral.

13
Mandible Fracture
  • Etiology
  • Direct blow
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Deformity, loss of normal occlusion of the teeth,
    bleeding around the teeth, lower lip anesthesia
  • Treatment
  • Immobilize the jaw with an elastic bandage,
    physician referral

14
Mandible Dislocation
  • Etiology
  • Side blow to an open mouth
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Locked in an open position, jaw movement almost
    impossible, overriding malocclusion of the teeth
  • Treatment
  • Immobilize the jaw with an elastic bandage and
    ice, physician referral, soft diet, and NSAIDs

15
Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction
  • Etiology
  • Forward translation of the jaw
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Headache, earache, vertigo, inflammation, neck
    pain
  • Treatment
  • Strengthening exercises for hypermobility
    mobilization exercises for hypomobility
    custom-fitted mouthpiece

16
Zygomatic Complex (Cheekbone) Fracture
  • Etiology
  • Direct blow
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Deformity, nosebleed, seeing double (diplopia),
    numbness
  • Treatment
  • RICE, physician referral

17
Maxillary Fracture
  • Etiology
  • Direct blow
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Pain while chewing, malocclusion, nosebleed,
    double vision (diplopia), numbness in the lip and
    cheek
  • Treatment
  • RICE, immobilize, physician referral

18
Facial Laceration
  • Etiology
  • Direct impact with a sharp object or by an
    indirect compressive force
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Pain, substantial bleeding, obvious tearing,
  • Treatment
  • Pressure with a sterile bandage, dress the wound,
    possible physician referral

19
Tooth Fracture
  • Etiology
  • Any type of impact
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Possible bleeding, broken tooth
  • Treatment
  • May not require immediate treatment, if the tooth
    is not sensitive, the athlete can play. Place
    tooth in a plastic bag and refer to a dentist.
    Must play with a mouth guard.

20
Tooth Subluxation,Luxation, Avulsion
  • Etiology
  • Any type of impact
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Tooth is loosened or dislodged little or no
    pain
  • Treatment
  • May not require immediate treatment, if the tooth
    is not sensitive, the athlete can play. Place
    tooth in a plastic bag and refer to a dentist.
    Must play with a mouth guard.

21
Nasal Fracture andChondral Separation
  • Etiology
  • Direct blow from the side or straight frontal
    force
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Profuse hemorrhage, swelling, deformity,
    palpation will reveal abnormal mobility and
    crepitus
  • Treatment
  • Ice and compression, x-ray referral, protection

22
Nosebleed (Epistaxis)
  • Etiology
  • Direct blow
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Profuse bleeding, possible nasal pain
  • Treatment
  • Ice and compression, possible doctor referral

23
Auricular Hematoma (Cauliflower Ear)
  • Etiology
  • Compression or shearing injury
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Hemorrhage and fluid accumulation
  • Treatment
  • Apply some friction reducing agent (petroleum
    jelly), the athlete must wear head gear. If the
    ear is hot, apply ice

24
Rupture of the Tympanic Membrane
  • Etiology
  • Fall or slap to the unprotected ear
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Loud pop followed by pain in the ear nausea,
    vomiting, and dizziness loss of hearing and a
    visible tearing of the membrane
  • Treatment
  • Small to moderate tears usually heel
    spontaneously in one to two weeks. Infection can
    occur and must be continually monitored. Possible
    physician referral

25
Orbital Hematoma (Black Eye)
  • Etiology
  • Direct blow
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Ecchymosis and pain
  • Treatment
  • Ice and compression, athlete should not blow
    their nose due to the possible increase in eye
    hemorrhage

26
Orbital Fractures
  • Etiology
  • Direct blow from the side or straight frontal
    force
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Diplopia, restricted eye movement, downward
    displacement of the eye, pain, swelling,
    hemorrhage, numbness
  • Treatment
  • Physician referral, antibiotics, possible surgery

27
Foreign Body in the Eye
  • Etiology
  • Any circumstance where there are particles and no
    eye protection
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Pain and disability
  • Treatment
  • Flush with water

28
Corneal Abrasions
  • Etiology
  • Abrading force, usually from a foreign body in
    the eye
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Pain, watering of the eye, photophobia, eyelid
    spasm
  • Treatment
  • Cover eye with a patch, physician referral

29
Heart Contusion
  • Etiology
  • When the heart is compressed between the sternum
    and the spine by a strong outside force
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Severe shock, heart pain, certain arrhythmias,
    decreased cardiac output
  • Treatment
  • Medical emergency, must be transported to the
    hospital as quickly as possible, may need to
    begin CPR, treat for shock

30
Sudden Death Syndromein Athletes
  • Etiology
  • Usually a caused by some congenital
    cardiovascular abnormality, the three most
    prevalent being hypertrophic cardiomyopathy,
    anomalous origin of the coronary artery, and
    Marfans syndrome
  • Signs Symptoms
  • Chest pain or discomfort during exertion, heart
    palpitations or flutters, syncope, nausea,
    profuse sweating, heart murmurs, shortness of
    breath, malaise, and fever
  • Treatment
  • Prevention through counseling, screening, and
    early identification of preventable causes of
    sudden death.
  • Medical emergency, must be transported to the
    hospital as quickly as possible, may need to
    begin CPR

31
Head Evaluation
  • HOPS
  • History
  • Observation
  • Palpation
  • Special tests

32
Head Evaluation
  • Neuralogic exam
  • Cerebral Function - Questions that assess general
    affect
  • Whats your name?
  • What happen?
  • Cerebral Function - Questions that assess level
    of consciousness
  • Where are you?
  • What time (day) is it?
  • Whats the score?
  • Cerebral Function - Questions that assess
    intellectual performance
  • Count backward from 100 by 7s.
  • Months backward.
  • Cerebral Function - Questions that assess
    emotional status
  • Are they being erratic?

33
Head Evaluation
  • Neuralogic exam
  • Cerebral Function - Questions that assess thought
    content
  • Memorize three words.
  • Cerebral Function - Questions that assess sensory
    interpretation
  • Blurred vision?
  • Hearing problems.
  • Cerebral Function - Questions that assess
    language skills
  • Slurred speech.
  • Speech impared?
  • Reflex testing
  • Sensory (dermatome) testing
  • Pupil response
  • PEARL (Pupils equal and reactive to light)

34
Head Evaluation
  • Cranial Nerve Function
  • Sense of smell (I. Olfactory)
  • Eye tracking (II. Optic, III. Oculomotor, IV.
    Trochlear, VI. Abducens)
  • Imitations of facial expressions (V. Trigeminal,
    VII. Facial)
  • Biting down (V. Trigeminal)
  • Balance (VIII. Vestibulocochlear)
  • Hearing (VIII. Vestibulocochlear)
  • Swallowing (IX. Glossopharyngeal, X. Vagus, XI.
    Accessory, XII. Hypoglossal)
  • Strength of shoulder shrugs (XI. Accessory)
  • Speak (XII. Hypoglossal, X. Vagus)
  • Tongue protrusions (XII. Hypoglossal)

35
Head Evaluation
  • Cerebellar Function
  • Finger to nose
  • Finger to examiners finger
  • Drawing alphabet in the air with the foot
  • Heel-toe walking
  • Rhombergs Balance Test eyes shut with one foot
    in the air
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com