Mortality in surgery for extra severe craniocerebral injuries

There is no authoritative data on the mortality rate of surgery for extra severe craniocerebral injuries, but the mortality rate for this disease is very high and has been reported in the literature as 36.8% to 64.3%.
Extra-heavy craniocerebral injury is usually caused by car accidents, falls or blows, resulting in severe cerebral injuries such as cerebral contusion, cerebral hematoma and other craniocerebral injuries.
The patient’s condition is critical and deteriorates rapidly, and if not treated in time, the patient may lose his life in a very short period of time. Meanwhile, the effective rescue time of this disease is short, the treatment is difficult, the risk of surgery is high, the complication rate after surgery is also very high, and the prognosis is very poor, the mortality rate reported in the literature is 36.8%~64.3%.
Once extra-heavy craniocerebral injury occurs, it is necessary to go to the regular hospital immediately for medical treatment, timely diagnosis and salvage treatment, and fight for the time and opportunity of surgery, in order to maximize the life-saving.