Training Collections
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
Training Collections
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
2 topics, 7 min.
8 topics, 32 min.
16 topics, 1 hr. 11 min.
Cerebellar Hematoma with Tonsillar Hernia
3 m.Intraventricular Hemorrhage
5 m.Parenchymal and Subdural Hematoma
5 m.Retroclival Subdural Hematoma
3 m.Acute on Chronic Subdural Hematoma
3 m.Midline Shift
4 m.Recurrent Subdural Hematoma
4 m.Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
5 m.Follow-up Imaging of Brain Trauma
6 m.Venous Epidural Hematoma
3 m.Venous Sinus vs. Arterial Epidural Hematomas
7 m.Evolution of Epidural and Subdural Hematomas
4 m.Diffuse Axonal Injury
9 m.Lucid Interval in Epidural Hematomas
3 m.Brainstem Hemorrhage
8 m.Pediatric Skull Fractures
7 m.6 topics, 28 min.
4 topics, 18 min.
14 topics, 1 hr. 6 min.
Secondary Traumatic Injuries
2 m.Traumatic Intracranial Dissection
5 m.Vertebral Artery Dissection, Pseudoaneurysm
6 m.Arteriographic Evaluation of Dissection
4 m.Traumatic Dissection of the MCA
4 m.Overview of Brain Herniation Types
5 m.Mechanisms of Brain Herniations
9 m.Herniation resulting in Infarction
9 m.Acute Hemorrhage on MRI
6 m.Subacute Hematoma on MRI
7 m.Chronic Hematoma on MRI
8 m.Hyperacute Hematoma on MRI
2 m.CT of Blood
3 m.Brain Trauma Summary
3 m.0:00
I would be remiss if I didn't mention the marker for
0:04
hyperacute hematoma, and that is oxyhemoglobin.
0:08
Oxyhemoglobin is diamagnetic.
0:11
By that, we mean that it has no characteristics of Proton
0:15
Relaxation Enhancement, nor proton-electron dipole interaction.
0:20
Oxyhemoglobin effectively looks like water,
0:23
and therefore, is dark on a T1-weighted scan
0:25
and bright on a T2-weighted scan.
0:28
It is incredibly uncommon to see oxyhemoglobin on MRI.
0:33
Because of the rapid conversion of
0:35
oxyhemoglobin to deoxyhemoglobin,
0:38
we usually see acute hemorrhages as dark on T1
0:42
and dark on T2 because of the proton relaxation enhancement
0:46
of deoxyhemoglobin.
0:48
Remember, however,
0:49
that that proton relaxation enhancement characteristic is
0:53
field strength-dependent,
0:55
and therefore, at 1.5T and 3T,
0:59
we see the conversion of oxyhemoglobin to deoxyhemoglobin
1:03
relatively easily,
1:04
and therefore, hemorrhages are rarely
1:07
seen as dark on T1 and bright on T2.
1:10
However, if you are using a low field strength magnet,
1:15
which is less sensitive to the conversion
1:17
of oxyhemoglobin to deoxyhemoglobin,
1:20
you may get fooled by seeing something that looks like edema
1:25
but is actually a hyperacute hematoma
1:28
dominated by oxyhemoglobin.
1:31
So, this is a potential pitfall at low field strength.
1:34
You see something,
1:35
it looks just like edema, not a hematoma,
1:39
because you are less sensitive to the presence of
1:42
deoxyhemoglobin than at high field strength.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
I would be remiss if I didn't mention the marker for
0:04
hyperacute hematoma, and that is oxyhemoglobin.
0:08
Oxyhemoglobin is diamagnetic.
0:11
By that, we mean that it has no characteristics of Proton
0:15
Relaxation Enhancement, nor proton-electron dipole interaction.
0:20
Oxyhemoglobin effectively looks like water,
0:23
and therefore, is dark on a T1-weighted scan
0:25
and bright on a T2-weighted scan.
0:28
It is incredibly uncommon to see oxyhemoglobin on MRI.
0:33
Because of the rapid conversion of
0:35
oxyhemoglobin to deoxyhemoglobin,
0:38
we usually see acute hemorrhages as dark on T1
0:42
and dark on T2 because of the proton relaxation enhancement
0:46
of deoxyhemoglobin.
0:48
Remember, however,
0:49
that that proton relaxation enhancement characteristic is
0:53
field strength-dependent,
0:55
and therefore, at 1.5T and 3T,
0:59
we see the conversion of oxyhemoglobin to deoxyhemoglobin
1:03
relatively easily,
1:04
and therefore, hemorrhages are rarely
1:07
seen as dark on T1 and bright on T2.
1:10
However, if you are using a low field strength magnet,
1:15
which is less sensitive to the conversion
1:17
of oxyhemoglobin to deoxyhemoglobin,
1:20
you may get fooled by seeing something that looks like edema
1:25
but is actually a hyperacute hematoma
1:28
dominated by oxyhemoglobin.
1:31
So, this is a potential pitfall at low field strength.
1:34
You see something,
1:35
it looks just like edema, not a hematoma,
1:39
because you are less sensitive to the presence of
1:42
deoxyhemoglobin than at high field strength.
Report
Description
Faculty
David M Yousem, MD, MBA
Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean
Johns Hopkins University
Tags
Vascular
Trauma
Physics and Basic Science
Neuroradiology
MRI
Hematologic
Emergency
Brain
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