Cerebral Infarction in a Child after Moderate Brain Trauma: A Case Report

Abstract Intracranial hematomas and contusions are common entity after traumatic brain injury in children and young population. However, cerebral infarction after traumatic head injury is a rare entity with frequency ranging from 1.9 to 10.4%. We herein report a case of cerebral infarction in right anterior cerebral artery (ACA) and parts of middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory after moderate head injury in a 14-year-old boy, in whom computed tomographic (CT) scan of the brain was performed 3.5 hours after injury, which showed specks of pneumocephalus in sellar suprasellar region, and 12 hours after injury showed right ACA territory infarct and evolving infarct in right MCA territory. Bony injury included right orbital roof and right sphenoid wing linear undisplaced fractures. Possible mechanism for development of infarction is right internal carotid artery (ICA) dissection by fractured bone fragments and/or thrombosis. The patient developed hemiplegia on second day after trauma. Intracranial pressure (ICP) monitoring was done, which was suggestive of raised ICP. The patient underwent right fronto-temporo-parieto craniotomy and decompression (tissue sent for histopathologic analysis) and augmentative duraplasty with bone flap replacement on fifth day after trauma. Histopathology was suggestive of cerebral infarct with hemorrhage. The patient was improved at follow-up, 10 months after trauma after rehabilitation, and physiotherapy to modified Rankin scale (mRS) score 3. Hence delayed CT scan plays a vital role in detecting developing posttraumatic infarcts, and rigorous rehabilitation care is necessary for clinical improvement.

[1]  Kyu-Sun Choi,et al.  Cerebral Infarction after Traumatic Brain Injury: Incidence and Risk Factors , 2014, Korean journal of neurotrauma.

[2]  H. Alvis-Miranda,et al.  Fatal Massive Cerebral Infarction in a Child after Mild Brain Trauma: A Case Report and Literature Review. , 2014, Bulletin of emergency and trauma.

[3]  J. Hirata,et al.  Posttraumatic cerebral infarction caused by hemodynamic shearing stress following hemorrhagic shock , 2014 .

[4]  Hao Chen,et al.  Risk factors for posttraumatic cerebral infarction in patients with moderate or severe head trauma , 2008, Neurosurgical Review.

[5]  T. Scalea,et al.  Posttraumatic cerebral infarction: incidence, outcome, and risk factors. , 2008, The Journal of trauma.

[6]  I. Grunwald,et al.  [Stroke in childhood]. , 2003, Der Radiologe.

[7]  A. Server,et al.  POST‐TRAUMATIC CEREBRAL INFARCTION , 2001 .

[8]  A. Server,et al.  Post-traumatic cerebral infarction: Neuroimaging findings, etiology and outcome , 2001, Acta radiologica.

[9]  N. Muthukumar Basal ganglia-internal capsule low density lesions in children with mild head injury. , 1996, British journal of neurosurgery.

[10]  S. Mirvis,et al.  Posttraumatic cerebral infarction diagnosed by CT: prevalence, origin, and outcome. , 1990, AJR. American journal of roentgenology.

[11]  J. Snoek,et al.  Delayed deterioration following mild head injury in children. , 1984, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[12]  C. Hia,et al.  Running around in circles following ischemic stroke , 2022 .