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Brainstem Hemorrhage

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This was an individual who was trimming trees

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and fell from his truck onto the asphalt.

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This is the initial CT scan from the patient's study.

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And the initial run through

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suggests that the patient has had an injury in

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the scalp at the high left frontal region.

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We're going to look at the calvarium in just a moment,

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but the next thing one sees in a flash going by is some

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hyperdensity along the top of the corpus callosum,

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and maybe a little bit of blood that's collecting

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in the lateral ventricles.

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If we look at the patient's calvarium,

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see that there are no fractures.

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Coronal scans would be helpful to look in the gyrus

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rectus region for hemorrhage or contusion,

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as well as the anterior temporal lobes.

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And we wonder about a collection here along the floor

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of the middle cranial fossa on the left side.

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We see some of that blood products adjacent

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to the lateral ventricles.

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The patient was not doing well and got scanned

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6 hours later as part of the protocol.

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Here on the six-hour scan,

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we start to see a little bit more density than

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we're comfortable with along the tentorium,

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suggesting that there may be a subdural

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hematoma layering along the tentorium.

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And now we see more clearly intraventricular hemorrhage

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in the occipital horns of the lateral ventricle.

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As you recall,

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this is usually a marker for an

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injury to the corpus callosum,

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usually the posterior body and/or the splenium.

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A little bit of blood products also seen near

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the foramen of Monro on the left side.

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Since the patient was doing very poorly and

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yet the imaging was relatively mild,

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the patient was referred for MRI scanning.

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The MRI scan,

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if we look at the initial FLAIR image,

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you'll note that the normal

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low signal intensity of the subarachnoid

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space that should be present on a FLAIR scan,

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as you can see in the cerebral spine fluid of the ventricles,

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is lost over the high convexities.

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This bright signal on FLAIR scan is an indicator

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for subarachnoid hemorrhage.

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Now, this may be anything of pathology

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in the subarachnoid space,

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so it can be meningitis in a different situation.

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So there's subarachnoid hemorrhage

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and we see that, indeed,

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there is injury to the splenium of the corpus callosum

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and there is blood that is seen within the occipital horns

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of the lateral ventricles on the examination.

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The next thing, as we go downward,

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we start to see is abnormal signal intensity in the

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back of the brainstem at the tentorial edge.

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Remember that I said that an acceleration-deceleration

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injury site of pathology includes the posterior midbrain

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as the brain goes forward and back and the midbrain bangs

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up against the hard dural margin of the tentorium.

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This is what you are seeing here in the midbrain,

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more on the left than the right,

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on this FLAIR scan.

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You'll note that even in the posterior fossa,

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the vermian subarachnoid space is bright

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on FLAIR scan, which is abnormal.

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We then move from this to our diffusion-weighted scan.

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Why do we look at the diffusion-weighted scan?

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Diffusion-weighted scans are useful in identifying some of

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the shearing injuries that can occur in trauma

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because they do induce cytotoxic edema.

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And indeed, in the splenium of the corpus callosum,

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we see bright signal intensity on the DWI scan,

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likely from a shearing injury.

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Shearing injury, diffuse axonal injury,

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rotational deceleration injuries are all part of the same

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spectrum and are used relatively interchangeably.

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The most important sequence, however,

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that we want to look at is the gradient echo or

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susceptibility-weighted scan.

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In this case, a gradient echo scan

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was performed on this 1.5 Tesla scanner

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that did not have SWI pulse sequences.

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Nonetheless, even using gradient echo scan,

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we can see that there are multiple dark signal-intensity foci

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at the gray-white interface,

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characteristic of shearing injuries of the white matter.

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You see that they are these little black dots that

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are bilateral in this individual.

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Not only that,

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but as we get to the splenium of the corpus callosum,

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we see that indeed there is hemorrhage in the splenium of

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the corpus callosum and along the posterior septum

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pellucidum extending to the edge of the splenium.

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You'll also see intraventricular hemorrhage

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on the gradient echo scan.

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As we go further inferiorly,

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we do see some of the blood products in the back

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of the brainstem. So these little black dots

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represent hemorrhage in the back of

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the brainstem, in the midbrain,

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where the midbrain has opposed against the edge

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of the tentorium. And here in the vermis,

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you also see blood products

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demarcated by the dark signal intensity.

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So, this is another example of a

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patient who did not do well

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and was subsequently shown to

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have a much more extensive

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degree of injury from diffuse axonal injury

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demonstrated on the MRI scan.

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There's one more scan that was performed

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four days after the MRI scan.

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And as you can see,

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the CT just will totally underestimate the degree of

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damage that has occurred.

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You had the CT scan beforehand,

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you had the CT scan after,

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and they just look relatively mild injury

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when we know that there has been a devastating

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injury at the gray-white junction.

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This patient has, what one typically sees,

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is a pressure bolt to monitor the intracranial pressure

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as part of the therapy for the patient.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Vascular

Trauma

Skull Base

Neuroradiology

MRI

Head and Neck

Emergency

CT

Brain

Bone & Soft Tissues

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