Publication | Closed Access
Postoperative Hematoma
338
Citations
13
References
1994
Year
Interventional NeuroradiologyWessex Neurological CentreHematologyVascular SurgeryPerioperative CareVascular TraumaSurgeryNeurologyBrain InjurySkull Base SurgeryMedicinePostoperative HematomasRisk FactorsNeurological SurgeryHealth Sciences
This study examines the surgical practice at the Wessex Neurological Centre over the 5-year period from 1989 to 1993 to determine the incidence of postoperative hematoma and to identify risk factors for a perioperative bleeding disorder. The study includes only those postoperative hematomas (at any site) that followed and were related to a neurosurgical operation and were surgically evacuated. The study is prospective for the year 1993 and retrospective for the preceding years. Over the 5 years, 6668 operations were performed and 71 postoperative hematomas were surgically evacuated, accounting for an overall rate of 1.1% of operations. The records were available for 69 cases. The most frequent diagnosis leading to postoperative hematoma was meningioma surgery with a rate of 6.2% of cases (13 of 211); followed by craniotomy for trauma, 3.7% (7 of 192); aneurysm surgery, 2.6% (11 of 428); and intrinsic supratentorial tumors, 2.2% (10 of 451). Postoperative hematomas were intraparenchymal in 43% of cases, subdural in 5%, extradural in 33%, mixed in 8%, and confined to the superficial wound in 11%. The overall mortality was 32% (37% for intraparenchymal and 12% for extradural). Risk factors for a perioperative bleeding disorder were present in two-thirds of the patients. Administration of antiplatelet agents (aspirin and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) was the most commonly associated risk factor. At least 75% of these identified risk factors could potentially have been avoided or corrected.
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