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Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
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Pediatric Imaging
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Upskill in high growth, advanced imaging areas.
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Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
Training Collections
Library Memberships
Sale 25% OffOn-demand course library with video lectures, expert case reviews, and more
Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
Sale 25% OffPractice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
Ultimate Learning Pass
Sale 30% OffUnlock access to our full Course Library and all self-paced Fellowships.
Continuing Medical Education (State CME)
Complete all of your state CME requirements in one convenient place.
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.
Case Crunch: Rapid Case Review (Free)
Register for free live board reviews.
Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
Learn directly from the MSK Master himself.
Lower Extremities MRI Conference
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
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.
Compliance
NewTrack, fulfill, and report on all your radiologists' credentialing and licensing requirements.
Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
1 topic, 2 min.
24 topics, 2 hr. 9 min.
Clinical Scenario 1: New Neurologic Deficit Introduction
3 m.Case: Left MCA Stroke on Non-Contrast CT
5 m.Case: Left MCA Stroke on CTA
13 m.Case: Left MCA Stroke on MRI
9 m.Non-Contrast Findings in CT and Stroke
7 m.ASPECTS Score
4 m.Perfusion Evaluation
7 m.Timing of Therapy for Stroke
6 m.Case: Occluded Right MCA
11 m.Case: Acute Left MCA Infarct with Penumbra
12 m.Case: RAPID Analysis
4 m.Case: Right M1 Occlusion on MRI
9 m.Case: Old and New Strokes: Cardioembolic Phenomenon
7 m.Case: Basilar Artery Clot on CTA, CT, CTP
8 m.Case: Childhood Stroke on MRI, MRA, MRP
7 m.Case: Moyamoya Syndrome
4 m.Case: Childhood Stroke, Moyamoya on CT
4 m.Case: Superior Sagittal Sinus Thrombosison CT, CTV
4 m.Case: Imaging of Sinus Thrombosis
6 m.Case: Cortical Vein Thrombosis on CT, MRI, MRV
4 m.Case: Cortical Vein Thrombosis on CTV
3 m.Case: New Neurologic Deficit from Multiple Sclerosis
2 m.Case: Glioblastoma
3 m.New Neurologic Deficit Lesson Reinforcement Quiz
29 topics, 1 hr. 40 min.
Clinical Scenario 2: Head Trauma Introduction
3 m.Case: Head Trauma wtih Multicompartmental Hemorrhage
6 m.Case: SDH with Active Bleeding
4 m.Traumatic Brain Injury
7 m.Cortical Contusions
7 m.Extra-Axial Collections
3 m.Case: Subdural Hematoma on CT
2 m.Case: Epidural Hematoma on CT
3 m.Case: Epidural Hematoma from Transverse Sinus Injury on CT
3 m.Case: Epidural Hematoma from Transverse Sinus Injury, Prognosis on CT
2 m.Acute Epidural Hematomas
2 m.Epidural Hematomas, Continued
2 m.Case: Isodense Subdural Hematoma
4 m.Acute Subdural Hematomas & Diffuse Axonal Injury
10 m.Density of Falx/Tentorium
6 m.Depressed Skull Fractures
4 m.Case: Occipital Bone Open/Depressed Fracture on CT
3 m.Role of MRI in Head Trauma
3 m.Case: Non-Accidental Trauma
6 m.Non-Accidental Trauma CT (Part 1)
3 m.Non-Accidental Trauma CT (Part 2)
2 m.Posterior Fossa Lesions from Trauma
3 m.Case: DAI on MRI
7 m.Case: DAI on CT
3 m.Diffuse Axonal Injury
3 m.Case: DAI with Blood Products on CT
3 m.Traumatic Injuries: Herniation
6 m.Case: Herniations on CT
4 m.Head Trauma Lesson Reinforcement Quiz
19 topics, 1 hr. 24 min.
Clinical Scenario 3: Worst Headache of Life Introduction
2 m.Case: Ruptured PCA Aneurysm Leading to IPH on CT, Arteriogram
5 m.Case 26: Basilar Artery Aneurysm on CT, CTA
7 m.Localization of Aneurysm with SAH
3 m.Imaging of Aneurysms
9 m.Case: Mycotic Aneurysm on CT, CTA
4 m.Case 28: Non-Infectious Mycotic Aneurysm on CT
4 m.Arteriovenous Malformation
5 m.Case: Hypertensive Bleed, IPH with IVH on CT (Case 1)
4 m.Case: Hypertensive Bleed, IPH with IVH on CT (Case 2)
3 m.Signal Intensity of IPH on MRI by Age
12 m.Reversible Cerebral Vasoconstriction Syndrome (RCVS)
4 m.Non-Aneurysmal Perimesencephalic SAH
4 m.Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy
4 m.Case: Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension on CTA, CTV
5 m.Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension (IIH)
6 m.Case: Intracranial Hypotension on MRI
6 m.Case: Intracranial Hypotension - Spinal Imaging on MRI
5 m.Worst Headache of Life Lesson Reinforcement Quiz
16 topics, 41 min.
Clinical Scenario 4: Found Down Introduction
2 m.Case: Anoxic Brain Injury
3 m.Metabolic Brain Disease
5 m.Case: Hyperammonemia on MRI
3 m.Case: Thiamine Deficiency on MRI
5 m.Thiamine Deficiency
3 m.Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES)
5 m.Case: PRES: MRI
3 m.PRES Variants
2 m.Cytotoxic Lesions of the Corpus Callosum (CLOCC)
2 m.Case: CLOCC from Seizure Medication on MRI
2 m.Case: Toxic Leukoencephalopathy on MRI
3 m.Case: Toxic Leukoencephalopathy from Medication on MRI
2 m.Toxic Leukoencephalopathy
3 m.Case: Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy
6 m.Found Down Lesson Reinforcement Quiz
9 topics, 26 min.
Clinical Scenario 5: Fever and Seizure Introduction
2 m.Case: Herpes Encephalitis on MRI
6 m.Case: Herpes Encephalitis in a Lung Cancer Patient on MRI
3 m.Case: Listeria Rhombencephalitis on MRI
4 m.Status Epelipticus, CJD, and Encephalitis
4 m.Case: Abscess on MRI (Case 1)
4 m.Case: Abscess on MRI (Case 2)
3 m.Case 37 - Subacute BE with ventriculitis and sceptic emboli
4 m.Fever & Seizures Lesson Reinforcement Quiz
4 topics, 14 min.
0:01
I wanna make one point about the
0:03
benefit of susceptibility-weighted
0:05
imaging as a pulse sequence on an MRI scan.
0:10
Susceptibility-weighted imaging has largely
0:12
replaced gradient echo scan because of its very
0:16
high sensitivity to the presence of blood products.
0:19
This is an MPGR gradient echo scan looking for blood
0:24
products, and only the most observant individual might
0:28
suggest that there's a small area of dark signal on
0:31
this gradient echo scan suggestive of blood product.
0:34
This is the same patient again,
0:36
published in 2005, showing all of these
0:39
little black dots on an SWI sequence.
0:44
So this just highlights for you the
0:46
increased sensitivity for susceptibility,
0:51
deoxyhemoglobin, and hemosiderin
0:54
on SWI sequences, that's far
0:57
superior to gradient echo scans.
1:00
If you don't have the SWI pulse sequences
1:03
as part of your software package or your
1:05
scanner, I highly recommend you purchase it.
1:08
If you do not have it, then the next best
1:11
thing is going to be your gradient echo scan.
1:15
So let's continue with traumatic axonal injury.
1:18
As I mentioned, this is usually a rotational,
1:21
acceleration-deceleration injury. Histopathologically,
1:24
you have those axonal traction balls with
1:27
swelling of the brain and the shearing injury.
1:30
The triad is at the gray-white junction,
1:32
the corpus callosum, often splenium.
1:35
And then the dorsolateral midbrain.
1:37
And this is what is utilized to grade
1:39
the degree of diffuse axonal injury.
1:43
When one has all three of these
1:45
together, it has a very poor prognosis.
1:48
If you also see diffusion-weighted imaging, it
1:51
suggests that the patient has diffuse cytotoxic edema,
1:55
which again implies brain injury that is permanent.
2:00
So look at the gray-white junction, look
2:02
at the splenium, look at the midbrain.
2:05
And look at the residual of the contusional injury.
2:08
It used to be that we had this concept of
2:11
non-hemorrhagic shearing injury. With the
2:16
advent of susceptibility-weighted imaging,
2:18
that concept has really declined because
2:22
with SWI, we see so much more hemorrhage.
2:25
It's pretty rare for you to have a tearing of
2:28
the white matter without some element of petechial
2:31
hemorrhage seen on SWI.
2:33
If you only have gradient echo scans, maybe you're
2:36
seeing white matter regions without the hemorrhage.
2:39
That would be your non-hemorrhagic shearing injury.
2:41
But when you employ SWI sequences, you recognize
2:45
that non-hemorrhagic shearing is pretty uncommon.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
I wanna make one point about the
0:03
benefit of susceptibility-weighted
0:05
imaging as a pulse sequence on an MRI scan.
0:10
Susceptibility-weighted imaging has largely
0:12
replaced gradient echo scan because of its very
0:16
high sensitivity to the presence of blood products.
0:19
This is an MPGR gradient echo scan looking for blood
0:24
products, and only the most observant individual might
0:28
suggest that there's a small area of dark signal on
0:31
this gradient echo scan suggestive of blood product.
0:34
This is the same patient again,
0:36
published in 2005, showing all of these
0:39
little black dots on an SWI sequence.
0:44
So this just highlights for you the
0:46
increased sensitivity for susceptibility,
0:51
deoxyhemoglobin, and hemosiderin
0:54
on SWI sequences, that's far
0:57
superior to gradient echo scans.
1:00
If you don't have the SWI pulse sequences
1:03
as part of your software package or your
1:05
scanner, I highly recommend you purchase it.
1:08
If you do not have it, then the next best
1:11
thing is going to be your gradient echo scan.
1:15
So let's continue with traumatic axonal injury.
1:18
As I mentioned, this is usually a rotational,
1:21
acceleration-deceleration injury. Histopathologically,
1:24
you have those axonal traction balls with
1:27
swelling of the brain and the shearing injury.
1:30
The triad is at the gray-white junction,
1:32
the corpus callosum, often splenium.
1:35
And then the dorsolateral midbrain.
1:37
And this is what is utilized to grade
1:39
the degree of diffuse axonal injury.
1:43
When one has all three of these
1:45
together, it has a very poor prognosis.
1:48
If you also see diffusion-weighted imaging, it
1:51
suggests that the patient has diffuse cytotoxic edema,
1:55
which again implies brain injury that is permanent.
2:00
So look at the gray-white junction, look
2:02
at the splenium, look at the midbrain.
2:05
And look at the residual of the contusional injury.
2:08
It used to be that we had this concept of
2:11
non-hemorrhagic shearing injury. With the
2:16
advent of susceptibility-weighted imaging,
2:18
that concept has really declined because
2:22
with SWI, we see so much more hemorrhage.
2:25
It's pretty rare for you to have a tearing of
2:28
the white matter without some element of petechial
2:31
hemorrhage seen on SWI.
2:33
If you only have gradient echo scans, maybe you're
2:36
seeing white matter regions without the hemorrhage.
2:39
That would be your non-hemorrhagic shearing injury.
2:41
But when you employ SWI sequences, you recognize
2:45
that non-hemorrhagic shearing is pretty uncommon.
Report
Faculty
David M Yousem, MD, MBA
Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean
Johns Hopkins University
Tags
Trauma
Neuroradiology
MRI
Emergency
Brain
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