## Correct Answer: C. Battle sign Battle sign is a clinical hallmark of **basilar skull fracture**, specifically fractures involving the mastoid bone and temporal bone region. It presents as ecchymosis (bruising) over the mastoid process, typically appearing 12–36 hours post-injury as blood tracks from the fracture site through tissue planes to the skin surface behind the ear. This is a **delayed sign** — absence at initial presentation does not rule out basilar fracture. In the Indian trauma setting, where motor vehicle accidents and falls are common causes of head injury, Battle sign is a critical bedside indicator prompting urgent neuroimaging (CT head with bone windows) to rule out intracranial complications, CSF rhinorrhea/otorrhea, and cranial nerve injuries. The sign is named after American surgeon William Henry Battle and is pathognomonic for basilar fracture when present, though not all basilar fractures manifest it. Recognition of Battle sign guides management toward prophylactic antibiotics (to prevent meningitis from CSF leak) and careful monitoring for delayed complications like epidural hematoma or subdural hematoma. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Bezold abscess** — Bezold abscess is a **subperiosteal collection of pus** that tracks from mastoiditis through a cortical defect into the neck or infratemporal region—it is an **infectious complication** of chronic suppurative otitis media, not a direct sign of skull fracture. While mastoiditis can occur post-fracture, Bezold abscess requires active infection and is not an acute traumatic finding. This is a trap for students confusing mastoid pathology with trauma. **B. Griesinger sign** — Griesinger sign is **edema and erythema over the mastoid process** due to thrombophlebitis of the mastoid emissary vein—a sign of **acute mastoiditis** secondary to otitis media, not skull fracture. It appears as swelling anterior to the mastoid, whereas Battle sign is ecchymosis *behind* the ear. Griesinger sign indicates infection, not trauma, and is a common NBE distractor pairing mastoid signs together. **D. Mastoiditis** — Mastoiditis is an **inflammatory/infectious process** of the mastoid bone, typically secondary to untreated acute otitis media—it is a disease entity, not a clinical sign of trauma. While mastoiditis can develop as a *complication* after basilar fracture (due to CSF leak and infection), it is not the acute finding seen immediately post-accident. The question asks for a traumatic clinical finding, not a post-traumatic infection. ## High-Yield Facts - **Battle sign** = ecchymosis over mastoid process appearing 12–36 hours post-basilar skull fracture; delayed appearance does not exclude fracture. - **Basilar skull fracture signs**: Battle sign (mastoid), raccoon eyes (periorbital), hemotympanum, CSF rhinorrhea/otorrhea, cranial nerve palsies (CN VII, VIII). - **Management of Battle sign**: CT head with bone windows, prophylactic antibiotics (to prevent meningitis from CSF leak), avoid nasal intubation, monitor for epidural/subdural hematoma. - **Bezold abscess** = subperiosteal pus collection from chronic mastoiditis tracking into neck—infectious, not traumatic. - **Griesinger sign** = mastoid edema/erythema from mastoid emissary vein thrombophlebitis in acute mastoiditis—infection-related, not trauma-related. ## Mnemonics **Battle Sign = Basilar Fracture** **B**asic **A**cute **T**rauma **T**emporal **L**esion **E**cchymosis = **BATTLE**. Ecchymosis behind ear (mastoid) = basilar fracture until proven otherwise. **Basilar Fracture Signs (3 B's)** **B**attle sign (mastoid ecchymosis), **B**raccoon eyes (periorbital), **B**lood in external auditory canal (hemotympanum). All three = high suspicion for basilar fracture. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs Griesinger sign and Bezold abscess (both mastoid-related) with Battle sign to trap students who confuse infectious mastoid pathology with traumatic basilar fracture signs. The key discriminator is **trauma vs. infection**: Battle sign is acute trauma; the others are chronic/acute infection. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian emergency departments, a patient presenting with ecchymosis behind the ear post-RTA should trigger immediate CT head and careful assessment for CSF leak (tilt-table test, halo sign on gauze). Prophylactic antibiotics and avoidance of nasal intubation are critical to prevent meningitis—a common preventable complication in our resource-limited trauma settings. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 37 (Ear, Nose & Throat); Harrison Ch. 394 (Head & Neck Trauma)_
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