Summary:
Eighteen patients with an epidural haematoma of the posterior fossa from a total number of 331 patients
with an epidural haematoma are reported. Nine patients were in the first two decades of life. In the
clinical diagnosis the major signs were local injury, occipital fracture, deterioration of consciousness
and impaired respiration. CT scan enables prompt diagnosis. Fifteen cases took an acute course.
Epidural clots in 12 patients were extended upwards above the lateral sinus and torcular. Three patients
had associated surgical intracranial lesions: cerebellar haematoma in two, and supratentorial acute
subdural haematoma in one. Fifteen patients underwent surgical treatment, one of them died.
Key words:
epidural haematoma, posterior fossa, head injury
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