Upcoming Events
Log In
Pricing
Free Trial

Case - Subacute Stroke Evaluation (Case 3)

HIDE
PrevNext

0:01

These are images of a 71-year-old

0:04

female who was last seen well five days

0:07

ago and had left-sided hemiparesis.

0:12

This is a non-contrast CT, and what we see

0:16

on the non-contrast CT is some hypodensity

0:19

in the temporal lobe and the insula, and we

0:22

see areas of hemorrhage within the insula

0:24

and the basal ganglia, and this goes up to

0:28

involve the inferior parietal lobe and the

0:31

right corona radiata, there's some mass effect.

0:34

So, hemorrhagic lesion.

0:38

First thing I'm going to say is this

0:40

corresponding to a vascular territory?

0:43

Well, it does fit the right MCA territory.

0:48

So, we got a CTA, so let's look at the CTA, and

0:52

you can see the CTA looks completely normal.

0:56

MCA branches look normal, they're

0:57

symmetric compared to the other side.

0:59

The PCA is normal.

1:00

We didn't see any major

1:02

thing going on in the neck.

1:04

So it kind of looks like it might be

1:06

in a vascular territory or not 100 percent

1:09

sure, not a tumor, a little weird for

1:14

venous infarction, but that's another

1:16

possibility amongst other etiologies.

1:20

And so the next thing we did was.

1:25

Get an MR.

1:26

You can see the FLAIR-weighted image, similar

1:30

to the CT, where you've got these areas

1:32

of edema and mass effect and some areas of

1:37

T2 dark signal, which is consistent with

1:40

the hemorrhage and on the SWI image, we

1:47

confirm that the hyperdensity is hemorrhage.

1:49

This is.

1:50

There's parenchymal hematomas in the

1:50

posterior insula and in the basal

1:55

ganglia and in the right parietal lobe.

1:59

There are some other tiny areas

2:01

of scattered microhemorrhages.

2:04

And what really helps us here is that what we

2:06

see on the diffusion-weighted image is areas

2:10

of restricted diffusion throughout This lesion.

2:16

So the dark signals, the hemorrhage, but

2:17

the rest of it, it's restricted diffusion.

2:20

And so this helps us confidently say

2:24

that, um, this was a subacute stroke

2:26

and not caused by another etiology.

2:29

The reason the vessels looked normal is because

2:31

there had been reperfusion, and with the pre

2:34

perfusion there were parenchymal hematomas.

Report

Faculty

Pamela W Schaefer, MD, FACR

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chair of Education

Massachusetts General Hospital

Tags

Vascular Imaging

Neuroradiology

Neuro

MRI

Head and Neck

CTA

CT

Brain

© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.

Contact UsTerms of UsePrivacy Policy