# 44 - 12. Traumatic brain injury

# 12. Traumatic brain injury

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Spinal accessory nerve - CN XI 
 Spinal root supplies trapezius and sternocleidomastoid. 
Hypoglossal nerve - CN XII 
 It provides motor innervation for all the extrinsic and intrinsic muscles of the tongue. To test the 
hypoglossal nerve, have the patient protrude the tongue; when paralyzed on 1 side, the tongue 
deviates to the side of paralysis on protrusion. 
12. 
Traumatic brain injury 
 Traumatic brain injury is the result of mechanical forces applied to the skull and transmitted to the 
brain. This may lead to focal and/or diffuse brain damage. 
 Focal lesions often result from a direct blow to the head and include brain laceration, contusion, 
intracerebral hemorrhage, subarachnoid or subdural hemorrhage, and ischemic infarct. 
 Concussion causes transient coma for hours followed by apparent complete clinical recovery. Brain 
contusion leads to prolonged coma, focal signs and lasting brain damage. Pathological support for 
the distinction between concussion vs. contusion is poor. 
 Contusion occurs directly beneath (coup injury) or contralateral (contrecoup injury) to the site of 
impact. Contre-coup is most common in the orbital–frontal area and the temporal tips, where 
acceleration/deceleration forces cause the brain to impact on the bony protuberances of the skull. A 
frontal behavioural dyscontrol syndrome occurs in cases of bilateral orbitofrontal injury. 
 Mechanisms of TBI include axonal and neuronal damage from direct trauma, shearing and rotational 
stresses on decelerating brain, brain oedema and raised intracranial pressure, brain hypoxia and 
ischaemia. 
 The differential motion of the brain within the skull can cause shearing and stretching of the axons 
resulting in diffuse axonal injury (DAI). DAI related damage occurs over a more widespread area 
with extensive lesions in white matter tracts than in focal brain injury. DAI is more often associated 
with persistent vegetative state and coma. 
 Two types of amnesia can occur after head injury: 
 
Post-traumatic amnesia (PTA) includes anterograde amnesia for the period of injury and the 
period following injury until normal memory resumes. 
 
Retrograde amnesia includes dense amnesia for the period between the last clearly recalled 
memory prior to the injury and the injury itself. The duration of PTA is mostly in minutes, and 
with increasing time after the injury, the duration of PTA reduces gradually. 
 GCS (Glasgow coma scale) at 24 hours after injury is widely used to assess severity. Apart from GCS 
other indices of TBI severity include the length of coma (LOC), duration of post-traumatic amnesia 
(PTA), and the Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) scores. LOC and PTA have been used exclusively to 
predict the functional outcome, but the AIS has been used to predict survival. Most investigations 
have found LOC or PTA to be more predictive of functional status than GCS. 
 Poor prognostic factors with respect to psychiatric morbidity following head injury includes long 
duration of loss of consciousness, long PTA, elderly, chronic alcohol use, diffuse brain damage, new 
onset seizures and focal damage to dominant lobe.

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Duration of PTA 
Classification 
Functional outcome 
PTA less than 60 minutes 
 Mild injury 
May return to work in <1 month 
PTA between 1-24 hours 
Moderate injury 
May return to work in 2 months 
PTA between 1-7 days 
Severe injury 
May return to work in 4months 
PTA greater than 7 days 
Very severe injury 
May require > 1 year for return to work 
 Late sequelae 
o Cognitive impairment is common especially after closed head injuries with PTA lasting >24 
hours. 
o Personality changes are most likely after a head injury to the orbitofrontal lobe or anterior 
temporal lobe. 
o Depression (most common sequelae) and anxiety occur in roughly 1/4 of head injury survivors. 
Suicide risk is also higher post head injury. 
o Post-concussional syndrome is characterized by headache; dizziness; insomnia; irritability; 
emotional lability; increased sensitivity to noise, light, etc.; fatigue; poor concentration; anxiety; 
and depression. 
o A schizophrenia-like psychosis with prominent paranoia is associated with left temporal injury 
while affective psychoses (esp. mania in 9% patients) are associated with right temporal or 
orbitofrontal injury. There is also an increased prevalence of schizophrenia post head injury (-2.5% 
develop the disorder). 
o Post-traumatic epilepsy is seen in 5% closed and 30% open head injuries (usually during the 
first year) and worsens the prognosis. 
o Less psychopathology in children after head injury due to increased brain plasticity.

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Notes prepared using excerpts from: 
 
 Barton, JJS. Prosopagnosia associated with a left occipitotemporal lesion. Neuropsychologia. 2008 46(8):221424 
 Cartlidge, N. States related to or confused with coma. Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2001; 71(Suppl 1):i18-i19 
 Higgins, E S.& George, MS. Neuroscience of Clinical Psychiatry, The: The Pathophysiology of Behavior and 
Mental Illness, 1st Edition. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 2007. Page 16 
 http://www.emedicine.com/neuro/TOPIC632.HTM 
 http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1147993-overview 
 Katz DI, Alexander MP. Traumatic brain injury: predicting course of recovery and outcome for patients 
admitted to rehabilitation. Arch Neurol 1994; 51: 661–70 
 Kipps & Hodges. J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatry 2005;76;22-30 
 Koyama T, Tamai K, Togashi K (2006) Current status of body MR imaging : fast MR imaging and diffusionweighted imaging. Int J Clin Oncol 11:278-285. 
 Lewis DA. Structure of the human prefrontal cortex. Am J Psychiatry. 2004; 161[8]: 1366 
 Moo et al. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2003;74:530-532 
 Semple et al (Ed). The Oxford Handbook of Psychiatry 1st edition. Oxford University Press 2005. 
 Zadikoff C and Lang AE. (2005) Apraxia in movement disorders. Brain 128:1480–97 
DISCLAIMER: This material is developed from various revision notes assembled while preparing for 
MRCPsych exams. The content is periodically updated with excerpts from various published 
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sources are cited and acknowledged wherever possible; due to the structure of this material, 
acknowledgements have not been possible for every passage/fact that is common knowledge 
in psychiatry. We do not check the accuracy of drug related information using external sources; 
no part of these notes should be used as prescribing information.