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Training Collections
Library Memberships
On-demand course library with video lectures, expert case reviews, and more
Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
Practice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
Ultimate Learning Pass
Unlock access to our full Course Library and all self-paced Fellowships.
Noon Conference (Free)
Get access to free live lectures, every week, from top radiologists.
Case of the Week (Free)
Get a free weekly case delivered right to your inbox.
Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
Learn directly from the MSK Master himself.
Lower Extremities MRI Conference
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
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Who We Serve
For Training Programs
Supplement your training program with case-based learning for residents, registrars, fellows, and more.
For Private Practices
Upskill in high growth, advanced imaging areas.
Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
4 topics, 10 min.
10 topics, 19 min.
17 topics, 1 hr. 11 min.
Anterior Globe Rupture with Laterally Dislocated Cataract
4 m.Foreign Body in Globe
4 m.Wood Foreign Body and Ocular Hypotony
2 m.Hemmorhage in Both Chambers, Open Globe
3 m.Staphyloma
4 m.Persistent Hyperplastic Primary Vitreous (PHPV)
5 m.Retinal Detachment
3 m.Retinoblastoma on CT
4 m.Retinoblastoma on MRI
9 m.Bilateral Retinoblastoma
7 m.Ocular Pathology - Review
11 m.Endophthalmitis
3 m.PHPV Review, Coloboma, and Staphyloma
5 m.Phthisis Bulbi, Macrophthalmia, and Microphthalmia
4 m.Ocular Calcification
4 m.Retinoblastoma - Review
5 m.Choroidal Melanoma
3 m.15 topics, 1 hr. 8 min.
Intraconal, Conal and Extraconal Anatomy
1 m.Intraconal Hemangioma
5 m.Venous Vascular Malformation
3 m.Optic Nerve Glioma, NF1
4 m.Optic pathway glioma (pilocytic astrocytoma)
4 m.Optic Neuritis, Multiple Sclerosis
6 m.Optic Neuritis, Multiple Sclerosis (2)
7 m.Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder
5 m.Neuromyelitis Optica With Spinal Cord Involvement
3 m.Optic Nerve Sheath Meningioma
5 m.Bilateral Optic Neuritis, Leukemia
6 m.Intraconal Pathology - Review
11 m.Optic Neuritis - Review
5 m.Optic Nerve Glioma - Review
4 m.Optic Nerve Sheath Meningioma - Review
6 m.5 topics, 16 min.
18 topics, 55 min.
Extraconal Pathology - Introduction
1 m.Periorbital Cellulitis & Abscess
4 m.Type 3 Orbital Infection
3 m.Solitary Fibrous Tumor
4 m.Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis
2 m.Juvenile Ossifying Fibroma
2 m.Perineural Spread of Squamous Cell Carcinoma
5 m.Proptosis from Extraosseous Extension of Prostate Metastasis
3 m.Orbital Floor Fracture
5 m.Orbital Floor Fracture with Muscle/Fat Herniation
4 m.Orbital Floor Fracture: Status Post Repair
2 m.Bilateral Orbital Fracture Repair
2 m.Periorbital Cellulitis - Review
5 m.Orbital Pseudotumor - Review
3 m.Orbital Wall Abnormalities - Review
3 m.Orbital Fracture - Review
7 m.Giant Cell Reparative Granuloma
3 m.Granulomatous Sinusitis with IgG4-related Ophthalmic Disease
4 m.6 topics, 19 min.
0:00
This is the third of our cases of ocular trauma and
0:05
this one is a little less subtle.
0:07
In this case, once again,
0:09
we are looking at the right globe and we see that
0:14
the anterior chamber cannot be distinguished.
0:17
The lens of the eye which is seen on the left side
0:20
normally, cannot be seen in the right eye.
0:25
It has been disrupted.
0:27
And we also see that the vitreous and the
0:31
shape of the vitreous is flattened.
0:35
This patient has a through and through injury to this globe
0:40
where both the anterior chamber has been ruptured,
0:43
the vitreous has been ruptured.
0:45
There likely is a wooden foreign body,
0:48
low density on the CT scan and we have hemorrhage in the
0:53
vitreous, as well as the anterior chamber and
0:55
complete disruption of the lens of the eye.
1:00
When one sees that the shape of the globe is as
1:06
flattened as it is on these serial images,
1:10
we sometimes will use the term ocular hypotony,
1:14
representing the low-pressure state of the globe,
1:18
which allows it to look like a flat tire or flattened out.
1:23
This globe is unlikely to be salvaged, and the
1:27
patient is likely to have enucleation.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
This is the third of our cases of ocular trauma and
0:05
this one is a little less subtle.
0:07
In this case, once again,
0:09
we are looking at the right globe and we see that
0:14
the anterior chamber cannot be distinguished.
0:17
The lens of the eye which is seen on the left side
0:20
normally, cannot be seen in the right eye.
0:25
It has been disrupted.
0:27
And we also see that the vitreous and the
0:31
shape of the vitreous is flattened.
0:35
This patient has a through and through injury to this globe
0:40
where both the anterior chamber has been ruptured,
0:43
the vitreous has been ruptured.
0:45
There likely is a wooden foreign body,
0:48
low density on the CT scan and we have hemorrhage in the
0:53
vitreous, as well as the anterior chamber and
0:55
complete disruption of the lens of the eye.
1:00
When one sees that the shape of the globe is as
1:06
flattened as it is on these serial images,
1:10
we sometimes will use the term ocular hypotony,
1:14
representing the low-pressure state of the globe,
1:18
which allows it to look like a flat tire or flattened out.
1:23
This globe is unlikely to be salvaged, and the
1:27
patient is likely to have enucleation.
Report
Description
Faculty
David M Yousem, MD, MBA
Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean
Johns Hopkins University
Tags
Trauma
Orbit
Neuroradiology
Neuro
Head and Neck
CT
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