Surgical treatment of depressed fracture of skull in neonates

Bo LIU, Shi⁃gang XIE, Xi⁃zan YUE, Guang⁃yu WANG

Abstract


Objective To explore the surgical treatment of depressed fracture of skull in neonates. Methods and Results Eight neonates with depressed fracture of skull who underwent surgery in Children's Hospital Affiliated to Shandong University from January 2021 to December 2023 were included, and all of them underwent CT thin⁃slice scan + 3D reconstruction of skull before surgery. According to the location, extent and depth of the depression, the depressed edge was drilled and the depressed skull was reduced by bone pry (3 cases). The depressed skull collapsed again after the bone was pried up, the skin incision was extended to reveal the depressed area, and the shaped absorbable connector was fixed in the depressed area after prying up (2 cases). Blunt separation of the skull and dura mater at the lateral corner of the anterior fontanelle, and deep bone pry to pry up the depressed skull for reduction (one case). The skull and dura mater were bluntly separated from the coronal suture at the edge of the depression, and the depressed skull was pried up and reduced by deep bone pry (2 cases). On the first day after surgery, the re⁃ examination of CT thin⁃slice scan + 3D reconstruction of skull showed that the depression reduction was satisfactory. Spontaneous fracture healing was happened in one case with linear fractures; hemorrhage resorption spontaneously was happened in one case with epidural hematoma. The average follow⁃up was 6.80 months, and the re⁃examination of CT thin⁃slice scan + 3D reconstruction of skull showed that the skull development was normal and there was no re⁃depression. Conclusions Immediate reduction of depressed fracture of skull can be achieved with surgery, and for fractures close to the anterior fontanelle or suture, the depression can be prying up through the lateral angle of the anterior fontanelle or the unclosed suture, which is more minimally invasive.

DOI: 10.3969/j.issn.1672⁃6731.2024.10.008

Keywords


Skull fractures; Infant, newborn; Neurosurgical procedures

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