Craniocerebral trauma component

Section I. Craniocerebral Injury Article 38: Scalp avulsion up to twenty-five percent of the scalp area accompanied by hemorrhagic shock; scalp injury resulting in loss of scalp viability up to twenty-five percent of the scalp area. Article 39: Fracture of skull cap (such as linear, depressed, crushed, etc.) accompanied by injury to brain parenchyma and blood vessels, with signs and symptoms of brain compression; rupture of dura mater. Article 40 Open craniocerebral injury. Article 41 Skull base fracture with facial or auditory nerve injury or cerebrospinal fluid leakage for a long time. Article 42 Craniocerebral injury with coma (more than 30 minutes) and neurological signs at the time, such as monoparesis, hemiparesis and aphasia. Article 43 Craniocerebral injury with cerebral contusion shown by CT scan of the brain, but it must be accompanied by neurological symptoms and signs. Article 44 Craniocerebral injury resulting in epidural hematoma, subdural hematoma or intracerebral hematoma. Article 45: Traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage accompanied by neurological symptoms and signs. Article 46 Intracranial infection caused by craniocerebral injury, such as meningitis and brain abscess. Article 47 Craniocerebral injury causing injury to cerebral nerves other than olfactory nerve that is not easily recovered. Article 48 Craniocerebral injury causing traumatic epilepsy. Article 49 Craniocerebral injury causing serious organic mental disorder. Article 50 Symptoms and diseases caused by substantial damage to the nervous system as a result of craniocerebral injury, such as internal carotid artery-cavernous sinus fistula, hypothalamic-pituitary dysfunction.