Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) – Trauma Surgery | Lecturio

142,107
0
Published 2017-05-17
► Sign up here and try our FREE content: lectur.io/freecontentyt
► If you’re an medical educator or faculty member, visit: lectur.io/medytb2u

This video “Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)” is part of the Lecturio course “Surgery” ► WATCH the complete course on lectur.io/tbi

► LEARN ABOUT:
- Definition of trauma
- Glasgow coma scale
- Trauma - skull and membranes
- Subdural hematoma
- Management with SDH
- Epidural hematoma
- Management with EDH
- Skull fractures
- Intracranial pressure monitoring

► THE PROF:
Dr. Kevin Pei is Assistant Professor of Surgery at Yale School of Medicine, Associate Director of Surgery Clerkships and Associate Director of Resident Education at the Yale Center for Medical Simulation. He is passionate about curriculum development and improving patient outcomes through creative education and simulation.

► LECTURIO is your single-point resource for medical school:
Study for your classes, USMLE Step 1, USMLE Step 2, MCAT or MBBS with video lectures by world-class professors, recall & USMLE-style questions and textbook articles. Create your free account now: lectur.io/tbi

► INSTALL our free Lecturio app
iTunes Store: app.adjust.com/z21zrf
Play Store: app.adjust.com/b01fak

► READ TEXTBOOK ARTICLES related to this video:
Traumatic Brain Injury: Management of Increased Intracranial Pressure (ICP)
lectur.io/headtraumaarticle

► SUBSCRIBE to our YouTube channel: lectur.io/subscribe

► WATCH MORE ON YOUTUBE: lectur.io/playlists

► LET’S CONNECT:
• Facebook: www.facebook.com/lecturio.medical.education.videos
• Instagram: www.instagram.com/lecturio_medical_videos
• Pinterest: www.pinterest.de/lecturiomedical
• LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/lecturio-medical/


0:00 Introduction
0:08 Traumatic Brain Injury
3:23 Subdural Hematoma
5:09 Epidural Hematome
6:32 Skull Fractures

All Comments (20)
  • @tilak231
    His voice is very good for meditation)))
  • @mayah2690
    Informative. I love all of the presentations. Great work!
  • @shamakuma1967
    SDH can happen with very trivial injury including a cough in the elderly patient in whom the brain will be shrunk thus breaking the bridging veins.
  • @NickanM
    Oh Dear. I just realized that I know the Glasgow coma scale from memory. Not because I'm a doctor, I lost a loved one years ago who was in a severe car crash.... However, this video was very informative, and I'm interested in the subject for obvious reasons.
  • I may add that there is no external fracture visible, im afraid that she suffer external damage.... Please im expecting someone knows how to deal with this....
  • Someone close to me was felt in my motorcycle and her head fell on the concrete road, even if my motorcycle was not running at that time she was unconcios at about 30mins, we di did not consult a doctor for 3 days, she fell pain and dissy when she stood up. After a week we go to the doctor and refferred to be ct scan to see the damage, im afraid of her situation, is someone here knowlegeable about this please give me advise what are the things we should do or what are the remedies first,...please...thanks a lot....
  • Nice summary. But we should remember that Not all epidural haematomas require surgery . If it is less than 15mm thickness , midline shift of less than 5 mm and no drop in gcs referrable to the haematoma , they can be admitted and monitored closely.
  • @AKHIL-mg7cz
    At age of 25 years old , i drank 15 Litres of water in 15 hours . I was drinking 1 Litre of water after every 1 hour . Then i suffered from LightHeadedness . I have suffered brain damage . My ability to understand and think have decreased . Please help please
  • I have a TBI I can't read and write very well I'm learning to read and write I just know how long does it take for that to change
  • @terryturns9646
    i was in a realy bad place and it seemed to be the only way out it was actually a suicide attempt by drug overdose I stoped breathing for a while and was found unresponsive and the lack of oxygen to my brain caused hypoxia a type of brain injury but to everyone else I look and seem normal but I seize up and go all stiff and fall, my body completely locks up especially if I'm in crowded places or im about to be attacked wich means I cant defend myself or my family it worries me alot I just dont feel safe anywhere. There must be somthing I can do
  • sir please help sex life can cure this disease . only treatment for disease sex . answer my question sir .