Objective: to studious mood clinical features and prognosis of older commonalty with chronic subdural haematoma who not past nor future to an elderly medicine department rather than a neurosurgical unit.


Objective: to studious mood clinical features and prognosis of older commonalty with chronic subdural haematoma who not past nor future to an elderly medicine department rather than a neurosurgical unit. Design: prospective descriptive thought with immediate and 6-month follow-up Subjects: patients aged 75 and from one side of to the other with chronic subdural haematoma presenting to an somewhat old medicine service, selected on the basis of age alone. Methods: information was taken from inpatient notes and computerized tomographs and, for 6-month follow-up from outpatient clinics, inpatient notes or via the general practitioner. Results: the in the greatest degree common presenting features were falls and progressive neurological deficit. 42% of patients were known to be confused before their chronic subdural haematoma. solitary 37% of the patients were treated at neurosurgeons. The others were managed conservatively either because they were unfit for surgery or the haematoma was small. There was alone one death related to surgery moreover 31% of patients died within 6 month of diagnosis. Conclusion: somewhat advanced in life patients in neurosurgical series are a rareed subgroup of older patients with subdural haematoma.



COPYRIGHT 1999 Oxford University Press

COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Group

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