Interactive Transcript
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This is the same patient as I described previously.
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After a few days, as you can see,
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the patient has undergone surgery for evacuation
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of the epidural hematoma on the right side.
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And so, we see some air and blood products
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on the right side.
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Now,
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this collection is no longer confined by the dura,
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and therefore, it is crescentic in shape,
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and therefore, represents a subdural hematoma
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in the postoperative setting.
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You'll notice that over the course of time,
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the patient developed parenchymal hemorrhages
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in the left lateral temporal lobe,
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seen on the image on your left-hand side.
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And this is not unusual to have a contusion that occurs.
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You'll also see that the patient has developed
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a subdural hematoma along the tentorium.
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This is often better demonstrated in the coronal plane,
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but you can see that extra density on the right side
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compared to the left side,
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representing a tentorial hematoma.
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As we go further inferiorly,
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you'll notice that the blood products have collected
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along the left cerebellar hemisphere.
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So, this patient has a significant amount of
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damage to the brain with an epidural,
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a subdural, an interhemispheric subdural hematoma.
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We have the tentorial subdural hematoma,
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all in the same example.
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I want to show the MRI scan.
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This is the susceptibility-weighted scan of the MRI scan,
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which is our best technique for demonstrating blood products.
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And anything dark here would be either a vein
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or blood products.
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As you look at the tentorium,
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you can see that there is this black rim
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around the edge of the tentorium.
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What we're seeing is the superior vermis with blood
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products in the sulci of the superior vermis,
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as well as blood collecting along the tentorium.
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Here we have our postoperative state with blood products
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collecting the extra-axial compartment,
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and there's also blood products in the extra-axial
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compartment, overlying the left posterior
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frontal and parietal lobes.
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Here is the parenchymal hemorrhage that is demonstrated
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on the MRI scan as an area of dark
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signal from deoxyhemoglobin.
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There's one more finding on this
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MRI scan that is noteworthy,
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and I want to go to the diffusion-weighted imaging.
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This is the diffusion-weighted scan.
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What one sees on the diffusion-weighted scans are lots of
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small areas of high signal-intensity.
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Blood products,
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unfortunately,
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on diffusion-weighted scans
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can sometimes simulate cytotoxic edema.
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Normally, when we look at the
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diffusion-weighted scan,
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we're looking for the presence of high-signal-intensity
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that might suggest acute ischemia or a stroke.
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I'm going to go to a two-one-one
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and bring up the ADC map.
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And these areas of high signal intensity on the diffusion
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weighte imaging are not corresponding to low signal
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intensity areas on the ADC map.
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And so, they likely represent blood products
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in the subarachnoid space.
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Now, contrast that to this area.
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So, here we have a very bright area in the splenium of the
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corpus callosum on our diffusion-weighted imaging,
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which corresponds with dark signal intensity
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on the ADC map.
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So, this is indeed cytotoxic edema.
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Bright signal intensity on DWI in the splenium of the
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corpus callosum can be due to a variety of causes.
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The most common cause, in this situation, is a patient who
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has had a shearing injury of the splenium
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of the corpus callosum.
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In this case,
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what I would do is I would look at our susceptibility
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weighted scans and look for blood products that would
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indicate hemorrhage in the splenium of the corpus callosum.
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There are a few tiny dots here,
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and therefore, that is a possibility.
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The other possibility is that the bright signal on the DWI
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in the splenium could be due to the institution
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of antiseizure medications.
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It's not unusual for patients who have had head trauma to
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be placed on antiseizure medications such as Keppra,
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which is due to the irritation of the brain,
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that is the etiology for the seizures, that is,
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blood products in the brain.
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And in this instance,
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given the relative lack of hemorrhage in
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the splenium of the corpus callosum,
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I would suggest that this is most likely due to the
5:01
institution of antiepileptic drugs.
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And look in the EMR,
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the electronic medical record for that.
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If this was not...
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If the patient was not seizing and was
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not on antiepileptic medications,
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then we would suggest that maybe this is either
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non-hemorrhagic shearing injury or due to the trauma,
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or less likely, an ischemic injury.
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