| 1. | | Fragments of bone in many pieces. |
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| 2. | | Retrograde amnesia and a headache. |
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| 3. | | The most common causes of head injury. |
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| 4. | | Profuse bleeding from the head even with small cuts. |
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| 5. | | Fracture that involves an inward depression of skull. |
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| 6. | | Depressed fracture that enters into the cranial cavity. |
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| 7. | | Fracture that involves pneumocranium and CSF rhinorrhea. |
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| 8. | | This hematoma enlarges over time. May take 48 hours- 2 weeks. |
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| 9. | | Fracture that involves deafness and bulging of tympanic membrane. |
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| 10. | | Fracture that involves Battle's sign, CSF ottorhea, epidural hematoma |
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| 11. | | This hematoma involves focal symptoms. Develops over weeks or months. |
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| 12. | | Break in bone without the alteration of the part. A low-velocity injury. |
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| 13. | | Fracture that involves cortical blindness, ataxia, may alter CN III, IV, VI. |
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| 14. | | Fracture that involves periorbital ecchymosis (Racoon Eyes) and optic nerve injury |
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| 15. | | Bruising of the brain that may contain areas of hemorrhage, infection, or necrosis. |
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| 16. | | Type of hematoma that involves a linear fracture that crosses a major area in the dura. |
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| 17. | | Fracture that involves CSF ottorhea, Battle's signs, tinnitus, CSF rhinorrhea, facial paralysis. |
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| 18. | | This hematoma occurs within the brain tissue. The size and location determine the patient's outcome. |
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| 19. | | Decreased LOC, increased ICP, decortication, decerebration, and cerebral edema. Hint: It's an axon injury |
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| 20. | | Type of hematoma that manifests between 24 and 48 hours and involves an increase in ICP, decreasing LOC, and headache. |
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