🩸 Delayed Bleeding

Delayed bleeding refers to hemorrhagic events that occur hours to days after the initial trauma, surgery, or vascular event, often when the patient is clinically stable or discharged.

A bleeding episode that is not present on initial imaging or physical exam, but appears after a latent period, frequently requiring repeat imaging, reintervention, or close clinical observation.

  • Within 6–72 hours after:
    • Mild traumatic brain injury (especially in anticoagulated patients)
    • Cranial or spinal surgery
    • Endovascular procedures
    • Biopsies or shunt placements
  • Anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapy
  • Advanced age (>75 years)
  • Renal failure (affects drug clearance)
  • Inadequate intraoperative hemostasis
  • Unrecognized vascular anomalies
  • Delayed intracranial hemorrhage after a normal initial CT in mild TBI
  • Epidural or subdural rebleeding after surgical evacuation
  • Delayed hemorrhage in tumor bed post-craniotomy
  • Spinal epidural hematoma after lumbar puncture or decompression
  • Maintain high index of suspicion if symptoms recur (headache, confusion, vomiting, focal signs)
  • Repeat cranial imaging (usually non-contrast CT)
  • Consider ICU observation for high-risk patients even with normal initial imaging
  • Surgical or endovascular intervention if mass effect or clinical deterioration
  • Clearly document bleeding risk and timing of last anticoagulant dose
  • Inform patients and families about symptoms of delayed bleeding
  • Schedule structured follow-up or control imaging in high-risk scenarios
  • delayed_bleeding.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/06/14 20:19
  • by administrador