Treatment is generally based on the extent and location of the injury to structures inside the head.[1] Surgery may be performed to seal a CSF leak that does not stop, to relieve pressure on a cranial nerve or repair injury to a blood vessel.[1] Prophylactic antibiotics do not provide a clinical benefit in preventing meningitis.[2][3] A basilar skull fracture occurs in about 12% of people with a severe head injury.[1]
Basilar skull fractures include breaks in the posteriorskull base or anterior skull base. The former involve the occipital bone, temporal bone, and portions of the sphenoid bone; the latter, superior portions of the sphenoid and ethmoid bones. The temporal bone fracture is encountered in 75% of all basilar skull fractures and may be longitudinal, transverse or mixed, depending on the course of the fracture line in relation to the longitudinal axis of the pyramid.[5]
Bones may be broken around the foramen magnum, the hole in the base of the skull through which the brain stem exits and becomes the spinal cord. This may result in injury to the blood vessels and nerves exiting the foramen magnum.[6]
Non-displaced fractures usually heal without intervention. Patients with basilar skull fractures are especially likely to get meningitis.[7] The efficacy of prophylactic antibiotics in these cases is uncertain.[8]
Temporal bone fractures
Acute injury to the internal carotid artery (carotid dissection, occlusion, pseudoaneurysm formation) may be asymptomatic or result in life-threatening bleeding. They are almost exclusively observed when the carotid canal is fractured, although only a minority of carotid canal fractures result in vascular injury. Involvement of the petrous segment of the carotid canal is associated with a relatively high incidence of carotid injury.[9]
^"About Brain Injury". Brain Injury Association of America. October 12, 2012. Archived from the original on December 13, 2017. Retrieved July 5, 2015.
^Dagi, T.Forcht; Meyer, Frederick B.; Poletti, Charles A. (1983). "The incidence and prevention of meningitis after basilar skull fracture". The American Journal of Emergency Medicine. 1 (3): 295–8. doi:10.1016/0735-6757(83)90109-2. PMID6680635.
^Resnick, Daniel K.; Subach, Brian R.; Marion, Donald W. (1997). "The Significance of Carotid Canal Involvement in Basilar Cranial Fracture". Neurosurgery. 40 (6): 1177–81. doi:10.1097/00006123-199706000-00012. PMID9179890.