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September 1943

HISTOLOGIC STUDIES OF THE BRAIN FOLLOWING HEAD TRAUMA: III. POST-TRAUMATIC INFARCTION OF CEREBRAL ARTERIES, WITH CONSIDERATION OF THE ASSOCIATED CLINICAL PICTURE

Author Affiliations

CINCINNATI

From the Laboratory of Neuropathology, Cincinnati General Hospital, and the Department of Surgery, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine.

Arch NeurPsych. 1943;50(3):258-278. doi:10.1001/archneurpsyc.1943.02290210036002
Abstract

For the surgeon faced with the practical problem of treating injuries of the head there remain at least two great unsolved problems. These are the vascular alterations related to edema and hemorrhage within the brain substance and the disturbances in circulation of the cerebrospinal fluid. From the field of intracranial tumor surgery have come most of the significant contributions to the present, somewhat inadequate, understanding of the latter problem. The most recent additions to knowledge have concerned herniation of the uncus of the temporal lobe through the incisural notch. The subject has been elaborated on in a series of papers, among which may be cited those of Meyer,1 van Gehuchten,2 Jefferson,3 Reid and Cone,4 Moore and Stern,5 Smyth and Henderson6 and Schwarz and Rosner.7 Some of these authors have noted the same phenomenon in association with epidural and subdural hematomas. Thus, it now

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