Interactive Transcript
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This was a 34-day-old infant who fell from a chair.
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On the initial CT scan,
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one can see that the patient has had significant
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soft tissue injury to the scalp.
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Not only that but of the soft tissue windows,
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one can already see that the patient has
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had a fracture of the calvarium.
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This is at the coup side of the injury.
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You'll notice that there is subarachnoid blood products
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which are accumulating under the fracture site,
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and there is also an extra-axial subdural hematoma appearing.
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If you look contrecoup,
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you'll see that there is an extra-axial collection overlying
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the temporal region, and this has mixed density,
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likely from
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acute bleeding with unclotted blood.
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You'll also see that the patient has some blood products that
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are accumulating at the top of the tentorium,
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near the pineal region.
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The patient was scanned serially,
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but before that, I want to make one point
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about fractures in the infant.
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We have found that creating three-dimensional
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reconstructions of the calvarium have been infinitely
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valuable in detecting fractures.
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This is a 3D reconstruction from the bone-thin section
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images, which were 0.75 mm thick.
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As you can see,
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it well demonstrates the wide fracture that occurred in
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this patient that communicated with
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the superior sagittal suture.
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There also was a fracture which crossed
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the midline on the right side,
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and you can also see an additional fracture of the
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calvarium which extends to the lambdoid suture.
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Therefore,
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I highly recommend that one takes the thin section images
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and reconstructs them in a three-dimensional fashion
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to look at the calvarium for fractures in infants.
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It really does show it well.
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Now, let's see the patient's six-hour follow-up scan.
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The patient continues to show the soft tissue swelling and
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continues to show a small amount of subarachnoid
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blood and extra-axial collection
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under the fracture site.
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There is more blood product
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which is seen at the tentorial incisura,
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that is the top of the tentorium
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along the superior vermis.
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And one continues to see an extra-axial collection
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which looks a little bit larger,
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more posteriorly on the right side.
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Again, with mixed density, suggesting that this may
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be unclotted blood.
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Blood that is still bleeding currently.
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You'll notice also a new area of hemorrhage in the cortical
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surface of the medial aspect of the left frontal lobe.
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Let's see the patient's MRI scan.
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This is the MRI scan of the patient four days later.
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It shows continued swelling of the soft tissues of the scalp,
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as well as the fracture site and blood products
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underlying the fracture site on the right side.
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We continue to see the hemorrhagic collection
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in the right temporal region as well.
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And it doesn't look like there's very
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much in the way of midline shift.
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The patient is doing much worse than one would expect,
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however,
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from this degree of imaging findings
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on the T2-weighted scan.
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Before I show the susceptibility-weighted scan,
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which is usually the money scan,
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I do want to show the diffusion-weighted scan.
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As I said previously,
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shearing injuries can lead to cytotoxic edema
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that is seen within the white matter.
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This is the trace image of the diffusion-weighted imaging,
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and almost immediately,
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you can see that there are areas of high signal intensity
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along the gyrus rectus region,
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in the subcortical white matter
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of the right posterior temporal lobe,
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extending to the occipital lobe,
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in the frontal lobe on the left side
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and in the high right frontal lobe and parietal lobe.
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So, these are areas where the brain has been damaged
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in a setting of diffuse axonal injury.
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The DWI shows the cytotoxic edema.
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However,
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the susceptibility-weighted scans will show
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the degree of hemorrhage.
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Unfortunately,
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the patient was moving quite a bit.
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However,
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I hope that this scan can still impress you with the
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amount and number of hemorrhagic injuries
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to the brain from the shearing
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injury that the child sustained.
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We tried it multiple times.
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You see all these little black areas which represent the
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deoxyhemoglobin of hemorrhagic shearing injury
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in this patient
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whose CT scan and initial fast spin echo
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T2 weighted scans were relatively unrevealing.
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This is the T1-weighted scan
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showing small extra axial fluid collections.
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So, once again,
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diffuse axonal injury can occur not just in adults,
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but can occur in children and may be associated
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with devastating consequences.
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