Hæmorrhage from the superficial vessels of the brain.
This form of hæmorrhage, one of the most troublesome complications arising in head-operations, most commonly results from hasty or careless opening of the dura mater. Thus, when the dura is incised in a case of greatly increased intracranial pressure, the brain herniates suddenly outwards, and the incautious use of the knife will damage one of the dilated superficial cortical veins. The dura should always be opened with the greatest care, the knife being passed lightly over the membrane till the pia-arachnoid is exposed, when the dural margins are lifted up with small tenaculum forceps and the membrane slit up with blunt-pointed scissors or on a grooved director.
In the event of injury, the bleeding may often be controlled by light pressure with dry gauze, or wet gauze wrung out in hot saline solution as described [above]. If this fails, a very fine silk ligature may be passed beneath the vessel on either side of the site of bleeding. This procedure is not easy to accomplish, the tissues are so soft and friable. However, every effort must be made to arrest the bleeding, for not only does the hæmorrhage obscure the field of operation, but the presence of a blood-clot beneath the dura mater will lead at a later date to the formation of adhesions between the various membranes of the brain—a potent cause of headache, epilepsy, &c.
THE OPENING OF THE SKULL
Two methods are adopted in the exposure of meninges and brain—craniectomy and craniotomy.
Craniectomy implies the formation of a scalp-flap, exposure of the bone, trephining of the skull, and enlargement of the gap to the required size and shape.
Craniotomy implies the formation of a flap of scalp and bone in one, and the exposure of an area of dura and brain directly proportionate to the size of the bone-flap.
Craniectomy.
After the application of protective gauze and tourniquet, the scalp-flap is framed according to the requirements of the case. If the tourniquet is used, the knife is entered at one extremity of the proposed flap, carried down to the bone—through gauze and scalp in one—and the incision completed in a single sweep. Under other circumstances, digital pressure is applied to the main flap-supplying vessel, e.g. the temporal artery over the base of the zygoma, or else Kredel’s clamps or Vorschütz’s hæmostatic safety-pins are passed in such a manner as to control bleeding from the main supplying vessel. In the event of bleeding, the surgeon goes along quietly, deepening his incision and seizing each vessel as exposed.
In turning down the scalp-flap it is usually recommended that the pericranium should be included. This is quite unnecessary, and, under certain circumstances, should certainly be omitted (see [p. 129]). It should be stripped away from the underlying bone as required.