Interactive Transcript
0:00
This is a 64-year-old patient with myelodysplastic
0:04
syndrome who resided in a nursing home
0:07
and was found in the morning on the floor.
0:11
Scrolling the CT scan,
0:14
one can see that there is displacement from the midline
0:20
at the level of the septum pellucidum.
0:23
We'll measure once again.
0:25
You'll notice that when I measure from the midline,
0:29
I'm going from the falxian attachment to the bone spicule,
0:33
anteriorly, to the bone spicule of the occipital bone,
0:38
posteriorly, and that is how I define the midline.
0:41
And then, the septum pellucidum seen between the frontal
0:44
horns of the lateral ventricle to that line,
0:48
measures 11 mm or 1.09 cm.
0:52
Fool me once, shame on you.
0:55
Fool me twice, shame on me.
0:57
As you can see more clearly in this example,
1:00
the white matter of the juxtacortical white matter
1:03
does not go all the way out to the periphery,
1:06
and therefore,
1:07
this is yet another example of an isodense subdural hematoma.
1:12
Let me draw the cortical margin for you.
1:17
Here you can see the edge of the cortex.
1:20
You'll also note that further anteriorly,
1:23
we convert from an isodense subdural
1:26
to a hyperdense subdural hematoma.
1:31
This suggests that the patient has had
1:33
multiple episodes of bleeding,
1:36
including one more anteriorly that is more acute.
1:42
In addition,
1:44
you can see that the patient has blood products
1:47
that are acute along the falx.
1:51
Now, just to reiterate,
1:53
how do we know that this is an isodense subdural
1:56
hematoma and not an isodense epidural hematoma?
2:01
Remember,
2:02
crescentic shape and crossing sutures,
2:08
in this case,
2:09
the expected location of the coronal suture would
2:13
identify this as a subdural collection.
2:17
Scrolling further superiorly,
2:19
you can see the mixed density collection anteriorly
2:24
and the isodense portion more posteriorly.
2:28
For those of you with relatively good eyes,
2:31
you probably have already identified the contralateral
2:36
isodense subdural hematoma.
2:38
Here again,
2:40
we have the white matter that is not going all
2:42
the way out to the periphery.
2:45
And therefore,
2:46
there is indeed another isodense subdural
2:50
collection on the contralateral side,
2:55
in the left frontal and parietal region.
3:00
This becomes less dense posteriorly,
3:03
and again, makes the assumption that the patient
3:07
has likely had multiple episodes of head trauma,
3:11
leading to different age blood products in the subdural space.
3:17
This patient,
3:19
by virtue of the size of the subdural hematoma
3:22
and of the degree of midline shift,
3:26
would undergo neurosurgical evacuation.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.