Interactive Transcript
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I'd like to start with a discussion
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about intraparenchymal hemorrhage.
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By that, I mean hemorrhage that is within the brain
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in the intraaxial compartment.
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Let's start with this patient.
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This is a 53-year-old patient who was in an altercation.
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In general,
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my approach to evaluating the patient is to start
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centrally, looking at the ventricular system
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because the degree of midline shift
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is one of the indications for surgery
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and is a very important point.
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It also is a marker for whether or not
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the patient may be herniating.
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And that's an emergent finding that I would want to get
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on the phone with immediately.
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So in this situation,
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we have a patient who has multiple parenchymal hemorrhages
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on the left side, and we see that the ventricles
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are displaced from left to right.
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So, we would measure the midline shift in this fashion
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with our electronic calipers,
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and measure it to the septum pellucidum.
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This measures 5 mm.
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And we'll talk about the importance of the degree
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of midline shift in just a moment.
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The septum pellucidum is a good marker
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for supratentorial displacement.
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Lower down, we have the uncus.
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The uncus is a portion of the temporal lobe which is
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in the medial most portion near the tentorial edge.
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We also would describe what is happening with the uncus.
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And this is this region here in the left temporal lobe.
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You'll notice that it is shifted over more medially
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compared to the contralateral side.
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So, this patient does have uncal herniation
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demonstrated on this section.
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Were we to look in the posterior fossa for midline shift,
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we would generally refer to the fourth ventricle and to
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the degree of effacement and/or displacement
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of the fourth ventricle from the midline.
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So, this patient has both subfalcine herniation,
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in that there is displacement across the falx
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from left to right by 5 mm,
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as well as uncal herniation at the level of the
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temporal lobe by these large hemorrhages.
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So, the next thing to do is to characterize
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the hemorrhages.
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The neurosurgeons evaluate and characterize the quantity
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of the hemorrhage by doing three volume measurements.
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That is, three different diameters.
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So initially,
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they will measure the AP diameter of a hemorrhage.
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In this case, 5.5 cm.
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They will measure the maximum transverse diameter
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of a hemorrhage, in this case, 2.8 cm.
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Then we would have to do a multiplanar reconstruction
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to identify the superior-inferior
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extent of the hemorrhage.
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If you want to measure it without necessarily creating
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a coronal or sagittal reconstruction,
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you can simply use the table position markers for
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identifying the beginning of the hemorrhage, say,
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on this slice,
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and then moving to the top of it and note the table
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position and do your mathematics by simple subtraction.
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This hemorrhage that we're looking
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at here has some unique features.
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It is showing a fluid,
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fluid level that is a hemorrhage level with
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some anterior portion, which is less dense,
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and a more dependent portion, which is more dense.
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This implies that the patient is actively extravasating,
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that is, that we have portions of the blood products that are
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clotted and portions of the blood products which are not
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clotted. Now, just to prove that I don't tell falsehoods,
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you'll notice that the hemorrhage in the anterior portion
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on the left side is down at the lower
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anterior cranial fossa floor,
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and this is the gyrus rectus region that I refer
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to with regard to the locations of hemorrhage.
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So this patient has a hemorrhage along
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the gyrus rectus on the left side,
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demarcated by the hyperdense collection here in the brain,
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as well as a hemorrhage along the anterior portion
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of the temporal lobe, which, as I mentioned
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in my previous discussion, is an injury that usually occurs
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due to the temporal lobe banging up against the greater
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wing of the sphenoid and leading to
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that hemorrhagic contusion.
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Now, I may use the term interchangeably between
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a contusion versus a hematoma.
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Contusion usually refers to a bruise and is usually not
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as large or dense or as well defined
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as a parenchymal hematoma,
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but quite often we use the terms interchangeably.
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So this patient has multiple
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hemorrhagic intraparenchymal collections, as you can see,
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in the left frontal, temporal, and parietal lobes.
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But also one sees that there is a lesion here in the right
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parietal lobe for an additional area of hemorrhage.
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As I said previously,
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it is useful to look at both the thick sections as well
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as the thin sections. On this thick section,
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which is 5 mm thick,
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it is somewhat difficult to identify that the patient also
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has a subdural collection along the left temporal lobe.
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However,
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if one looks at the thin section images, and these are the
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0.75 millimeter sections
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that I referred to previously,
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one can clearly see that the patient does have collection here.
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It's also useful to, as I said,
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use different windows. This is more of a subdural window,
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which is wider in its width and centering,
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and you can see that there is a hyperdense extra-axial
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collection outside the brain on the left side,
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which we would also use the measuring tool to
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characterize as far as its maximum width,
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which in this case is 8 mm of thickness.
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And this will go up further superiorly.
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You'll notice also that there is hemorrhage that
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is extending into the sulci of the brain.
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This refers to subarachnoid hemorrhage.
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So in this one image, in this one section here,
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one can see parenchymal hemorrhage, subdural hemorrhage,
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as well as subarachnoid hemorrhage along the left frontal,
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temporal, and parietal lobes.
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Another point to be made is the fact that what
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we are seeing actually is a contrecoup injury.
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The scalp swelling, which you see
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in the right parietal and posterior temporal region,
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is this location where the patient
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actually was initially hit.
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And so, the primary coup injury is
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identified here in the scalp.
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But the contrecoup injury is the
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more traumatic in this case,
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where one has all the parenchymal hemorrhage and the
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subdural hemorrhage and the subarachnoid hemorrhage.
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So again, points out the importance
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of coup-contrecoup injuries.
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