Background and Importance: Bilateral occipital condyle fracture (OCF) is a rare type of injury that occurs at the occipitocervical junction, mostly due to high energy trauma to cranium with axial loading. These fractures are difficult to diagnose based on conventional cervical or cranial radiography and they have non-specific clinical manifestations. However, unstable fractures carry the most risk for morbidity and mortality due to their close relation to important neural and vascular structures. Acute retro-clival subdural hematoma (rcSDH) is a collection of blood dorsal to the tectorial membrane, which is a critical structure for maintaining occipitocervical stability, presence of posttraumatic acute retroclival subdural hematoma in the setting of non-displaced bilateral occipital condyle fractures in traumatic patients is a marker of high energy trauma with fatal course in acute setting due to compression on subarachnoid space by acute hematoma and subsequent increase intracranial pressure and a merely marker of occipitocervical instability due to injury/damage to tectorial membrane. We describe the imaging features and clinical symptoms and signs that led to the diagnosis and classification of stable bilateral OCFs with a quickly resolving rcSDH in a previously healthy man aged 25 years involved in a motor vehicle accident, allowing conservative management. The co-existing of both injuries has not been described in the literature to the best of our knowledge.
Published in | International Journal of Neurosurgery (Volume 5, Issue 1) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ijn.20210501.19 |
Page(s) | 38-41 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Occipital Condyle Fractures, Subdural Hematoma, Clivus Hematoma, Occipitocervical, Severe Head Injury, Atlantooccipital Dislocation
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APA Style
Mohamed Awad Mohamed Hassan, Alfadil Osman Alawaad, Ghalib Almesedin, Saggaf Alawi Assaggaf. (2021). Traumatic Retroclival Subdural Hematoma on Top of Stable Bilateral Occipital Condyle Fracture: Impact of Hematoma on Craniocervical Stability and Management Decision. International Journal of Neurosurgery, 5(1), 38-41. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijn.20210501.19
ACS Style
Mohamed Awad Mohamed Hassan; Alfadil Osman Alawaad; Ghalib Almesedin; Saggaf Alawi Assaggaf. Traumatic Retroclival Subdural Hematoma on Top of Stable Bilateral Occipital Condyle Fracture: Impact of Hematoma on Craniocervical Stability and Management Decision. Int. J. Neurosurg. 2021, 5(1), 38-41. doi: 10.11648/j.ijn.20210501.19
AMA Style
Mohamed Awad Mohamed Hassan, Alfadil Osman Alawaad, Ghalib Almesedin, Saggaf Alawi Assaggaf. Traumatic Retroclival Subdural Hematoma on Top of Stable Bilateral Occipital Condyle Fracture: Impact of Hematoma on Craniocervical Stability and Management Decision. Int J Neurosurg. 2021;5(1):38-41. doi: 10.11648/j.ijn.20210501.19
@article{10.11648/j.ijn.20210501.19, author = {Mohamed Awad Mohamed Hassan and Alfadil Osman Alawaad and Ghalib Almesedin and Saggaf Alawi Assaggaf}, title = {Traumatic Retroclival Subdural Hematoma on Top of Stable Bilateral Occipital Condyle Fracture: Impact of Hematoma on Craniocervical Stability and Management Decision}, journal = {International Journal of Neurosurgery}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {38-41}, doi = {10.11648/j.ijn.20210501.19}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijn.20210501.19}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijn.20210501.19}, abstract = {Background and Importance: Bilateral occipital condyle fracture (OCF) is a rare type of injury that occurs at the occipitocervical junction, mostly due to high energy trauma to cranium with axial loading. These fractures are difficult to diagnose based on conventional cervical or cranial radiography and they have non-specific clinical manifestations. However, unstable fractures carry the most risk for morbidity and mortality due to their close relation to important neural and vascular structures. Acute retro-clival subdural hematoma (rcSDH) is a collection of blood dorsal to the tectorial membrane, which is a critical structure for maintaining occipitocervical stability, presence of posttraumatic acute retroclival subdural hematoma in the setting of non-displaced bilateral occipital condyle fractures in traumatic patients is a marker of high energy trauma with fatal course in acute setting due to compression on subarachnoid space by acute hematoma and subsequent increase intracranial pressure and a merely marker of occipitocervical instability due to injury/damage to tectorial membrane. We describe the imaging features and clinical symptoms and signs that led to the diagnosis and classification of stable bilateral OCFs with a quickly resolving rcSDH in a previously healthy man aged 25 years involved in a motor vehicle accident, allowing conservative management. The co-existing of both injuries has not been described in the literature to the best of our knowledge.}, year = {2021} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Traumatic Retroclival Subdural Hematoma on Top of Stable Bilateral Occipital Condyle Fracture: Impact of Hematoma on Craniocervical Stability and Management Decision AU - Mohamed Awad Mohamed Hassan AU - Alfadil Osman Alawaad AU - Ghalib Almesedin AU - Saggaf Alawi Assaggaf Y1 - 2021/05/27 PY - 2021 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijn.20210501.19 DO - 10.11648/j.ijn.20210501.19 T2 - International Journal of Neurosurgery JF - International Journal of Neurosurgery JO - International Journal of Neurosurgery SP - 38 EP - 41 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2640-1959 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijn.20210501.19 AB - Background and Importance: Bilateral occipital condyle fracture (OCF) is a rare type of injury that occurs at the occipitocervical junction, mostly due to high energy trauma to cranium with axial loading. These fractures are difficult to diagnose based on conventional cervical or cranial radiography and they have non-specific clinical manifestations. However, unstable fractures carry the most risk for morbidity and mortality due to their close relation to important neural and vascular structures. Acute retro-clival subdural hematoma (rcSDH) is a collection of blood dorsal to the tectorial membrane, which is a critical structure for maintaining occipitocervical stability, presence of posttraumatic acute retroclival subdural hematoma in the setting of non-displaced bilateral occipital condyle fractures in traumatic patients is a marker of high energy trauma with fatal course in acute setting due to compression on subarachnoid space by acute hematoma and subsequent increase intracranial pressure and a merely marker of occipitocervical instability due to injury/damage to tectorial membrane. We describe the imaging features and clinical symptoms and signs that led to the diagnosis and classification of stable bilateral OCFs with a quickly resolving rcSDH in a previously healthy man aged 25 years involved in a motor vehicle accident, allowing conservative management. The co-existing of both injuries has not been described in the literature to the best of our knowledge. VL - 5 IS - 1 ER -