EPIDURAL HEMATOMA (EDH)

Definition

  • Collection of blood between skull and dura mater
  • Classically due to arterial bleed

Etiology & Pathophysiology

  • Middle meningeal artery rupture
  • Almost always associated with skull fracture
  • High-pressure arterial bleeding rapid expansion
  • Dura is tightly adherent at sutures blood cannot cross sutures

Typical Patient

  • Young adults
  • High-velocity trauma (RTA, assault, fall)

Classical Clinical Course 

Lucid interval:

  1. Initial loss of consciousness
  2. Temporary recovery (lucid phase)
  3. Rapid neurological deterioration

Clinical Features

  • Severe headache
  • Vomiting
  • Ipsilateral fixed dilated pupil (CN III compression)
  • Contralateral hemiparesis
  • Rapid fall in GCS

CT Scan Features

  • Biconvex (lentiform), hyperdense
  • Does NOT cross sutures
  • Often associated with skull fracture
  • Mass effect with midline shift

Management

Neurosurgical emergency

  • Immediate craniotomy if:
    • Volume >30 mL
    • Thickness >15 mm
    • Midline shift >5 mm
    • GCS <9 with pupillary abnormality

Medical (only if small & stable):

  • ICU monitoring
  • ICP control

Prognosis

  • Excellent if treated early
  • High mortality if delayed intervention


SUBDURAL HEMATOMA (SDH)

Definition

  • Collection of blood between dura and arachnoid mater
  • Usually due to venous bleed

Etiology & Pathophysiology

  • Tearing of bridging veins
  • Slower accumulation than EDH
  • Blood spreads widely as dura is not tightly adherent

Risk Groups

  • Elderly
  • Alcoholics
  • Anticoagulated patients
  • Cerebral atrophy

Types of SDH

Type

Time

CT Density

Acute

<72 hours

Hyperdense

Subacute

3–21 days

Isodense

Chronic

>3 weeks

Hypodense

Clinical Features

  • Altered sensorium
  • Headache
  • Focal neurological deficits
  • Seizures
  • No lucid interval (usually)

CT Scan Features

  • Crescent-shaped
  • Crosses sutures
  • Does NOT cross falx or tentorium
  • Variable density depending on age of bleed

Management

  • Acute SDH:
    • Often requires urgent craniotomy
    • Worse prognosis than EDH
  • Chronic SDH:
    • Burr-hole drainage
    • Excellent outcomes

Prognosis

  • Worse than EDH
  • Depends on:
    • Age
    • Initial GCS
    • Associated brain injury


EDH vs SDH (COMPARISON)

Feature

EDH

SDH

Location

Skull–dura

Dura–arachnoid

Vessel

Artery (MMA)

Vein (bridging veins)

Onset

Rapid

Slow

Lucid interval

Common

Rare

CT shape

Biconvex (lentiform)

Crescent

Cross sutures

 No

 Yes

Skull fracture

Common

Uncommon

Age group

Young

Elderly

Prognosis

Better if early

Worse overall


EXAM PEARLS 

  • Lucid interval = EDH
  • Crescent shape crossing sutures = SDH
  • Rapid deterioration + fixed pupil = EDH
  • Elderly on anticoagulants = SDH
  • EDH is a neurosurgical race against time
  • SDH mortality > EDH mortality


ICU & ANESTHESIA RELEVANCE

  • Aggressive ICP control
  • Avoid hypotension & hypoxia
  • Rapid airway protection
  • Reversal of anticoagulation in SDH
  • Hyperosmolar therapy as bridge to surgery