Interactive Transcript
0:00
This was a passenger,
0:02
an eleven-year-old passenger in a motor vehicle collision.
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The CT scan
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shows a relatively small collection
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over the left parietal region
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that has a lentiform shape to it,
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and there is associated some subarachnoid hemorrhage,
0:28
but it looks like a relatively small area of injury.
0:34
We want to look at the bone windows to see
0:37
whether there is a fracture.
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And indeed,
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one can see that the inner table of the calvarium
0:45
is fractured in this individual.
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So this was the coup side of the injury.
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And the patient has a small epidural
0:55
collection associated with it,
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likely from a small tear of a middle
0:59
meningeal peripheral branch.
1:01
Just to be sure,
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we would look at the thin-section images.
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These are the 1 mm thick sections.
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The disadvantage of looking at the thin-section images is
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that they do get more noisy
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since it is a 1 mm thick section.
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Nonetheless,
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although we can see some of the subarachnoid hemorrhage,
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we are still seeing a relatively small
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extra-axial collection here.
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We can measure this and 5 millimeter
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extra-axial collection,
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likely an epidural hematoma from a peripheral
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middle meningeal injury from the fracture.
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So call into the clinicians and say,
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I see a minor injury with a small incomplete fracture,
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small epidural hematoma measuring 5 mm by 2 cm by 1cm,
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a little bit of subarachnoid hemorrhage.
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And they respond to you,
1:56
"Oh, the patient's doing really well."
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The patient is doing very poorly and
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has alteration of consciousness.
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So, the patient will likely get serial scanning.
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And you're kind of unimpressed with the degree of
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the pathology, even on the thin-section images.
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At this juncture,
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if there is a discordance between the neurologic
2:25
examination and the CT scan,
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generally, the clinicians will repeat the
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scanning at the six-hour mark with CT.
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However,
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particularly in children where they don't want to do
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serial CT scanning,
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they may proceed to get an MRI scan.
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Let's see what happens to this individual.
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Okay.
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So, this is the same patient with the six-hour scan.
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And as we look at the patient study,
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we see that this epidural hematoma has increased in size,
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and there continues to be subarachnoid hemorrhage.
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Remember to look contrecoup.
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So, we saw that there was a fracture in the left parietal
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region and the epidural hematoma.
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As we look contrecoup,
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we're not seeing very much in the right hemisphere.
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And the clinician say the patient's doing very poorly.
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So, they may scan again at 6 hours
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or depending upon the width of this collection,
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they may intervene.
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Let's measure it.
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Epidural hematoma,
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measuring 2.2 cm.
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That's an indication for surgery.
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As you recall,
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the epidural hematoma
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indication was 15 mm width
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or 30 CCs of volume.
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In this case, they decided to wait
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and the next scan we get is an MRI scan.
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On the MRI scan,
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I'm going to show you the FLAIR scan first.
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So, this is a FLAIR scan.
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Dark CSF,
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dark white matter,
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higher-intensity gray matter.
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And you can see the collection of blood,
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as well as what looks like an underlying
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hematoma in the brain or contusion
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and likely the subarachnoid hemorrhage.
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There really isn't much in the way of midline shift.
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You probably want to look at the
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T1-weighted scan, as well.
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And it shows the mixed signal intensity blood products.
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And this is both dark on T1 as well
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as areas of high signal on T1.
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And by virtue of the fact it was dark on T2,
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we know that this is deoxyhemoglobin.
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You see that there are some blood products in the
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subarachnoid space, as well.
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Other than that, not too bad.
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If we look at the diffusion-weighted scans,
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we just see a little bit of cytotoxic
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edema in the area of the hematoma.
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We have a T2-weighted scan, as well.
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Again, dark signal intensity on T2-weighted scan,
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lentiform shape,
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likely representing acute epidural hematoma.
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Parenchymal hematoma with edema.
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Otherwise, looking pretty good.
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So, you dictate epidural hematoma with
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mild contusion in the posterior,
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left frontal, lobe and parietal lobe,
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with associated subarachnoid hemorrhage,
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22 mm in thickness, no midline shift.
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What did you forget to do?
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Well, I've told you before
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that the best sequence for detection
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of blood is susceptibility-weighted scan.
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This is the SWI scan,
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the susceptibility-weighted scan of the exact same patient.
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You'll note the very dark signal of the extra-axial collection.
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However, in addition, look for black dots.
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Here are black dots of deoxyhemoglobin in the subcortical
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white matter in the area adjacent to that contusion.
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But you can see that these little black
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dots are really all over the place.
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Here at the gray-white junction.
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Here in the right frontal lobe.
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These black dots are not veins.
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How do we know that they're not veins?
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These are the veins here.
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The veins usually are branching and they usually
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go from smaller to larger as they go centrally.
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Here's a hemorrhage in the splenium
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of the corpus callosum.
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Here is hemorrhage
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in the subcortical white matter of the parietal lobe,
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as well as
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the more posterior parietal lobe.
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And as we look further inferiorly,
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look at the frontal lobes.
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Lots and lots of these black dots all over the place.
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This is our gyrus rectus region.
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And there's blood products along the posterior gyrus rectus.
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Here we have the temporal region on the left side.
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Look at right along the gray-white matter interface.
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All of these areas of dark dots.
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These are all areas of shearing injury, hemorrhagic,
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shearing injury from diffuse axonal injury,
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in a rotational acceleration deceleration injury.
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There's even hemorrhage in the cerebellum.
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None of this is apparent on the T2-weighted scan,
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nor on the FLAIR scan,
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nor for that matter,
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on the accompanying CT scan from the same day.
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This is the power of MRI, in particular
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with susceptibility-weighted scanning.
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In a patient who has discordance between the imaging
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findings on CT and the neurologic deficits,
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one should definitely recommend susceptibility-weighted
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MRI scan in the setting of potential
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diffuse axonal injury.
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