Interactive Transcript
0:00
Usually based on the clinical information,
0:03
one knows whether the lesion that one is evaluating is at
0:08
the coup or the contrecoup portion of the anatomy.
0:12
Clearly, if the patient's head strikes a windshield
0:16
or a steering wheel,
0:17
or if someone gets punched in the occipital
0:20
region or the frontal region,
0:22
we know where the initial direct impact is,
0:25
and that is what is termed the coup injury.
0:28
Sometimes, if the patient is unconscious,
0:30
we may not know exactly whether the patient fell forward
0:34
and landed on the frontal region or fell
0:37
and landed in the occipital region,
0:40
and sometimes this can be used for either medical
0:43
legal purposes or for criminal investigations.
0:47
In general,
0:48
the coup injuries are ones in which one sees the swelling
0:52
of the scalp or the subgale region,
0:55
or where one has the initial fracture due to that impact.
1:01
However, epidural hematomas, subdural hematomas,
1:05
subarachnoid hemorrhage,
1:07
and intraventricular hemorrhage
1:09
can occur coup or contrecoup.
1:13
Similarly, contusions, as you heard previously,
1:17
can occur coup or contrecoup,
1:19
but they tend to favor the contrecoup
1:22
portion of the traumatic injury.
1:25
Also, with the initial injury,
1:28
one may have injuries to the blood vessels,
1:30
and these may be the indications for CTA to look for
1:35
dissections of intracranial vessels or dissections
1:38
of neck vessels, as the case may be.
1:41
For today,
1:42
we're going to be talking merely
1:43
about intracranial pathology,
1:45
and therefore, dissections of middle cerebral artery would
1:50
be the most common location for an intracranial
1:54
dissection from trauma.
1:56
You can have pseudo aneurysms as
1:58
the blood vessels are ripped,
1:59
and these may occur both in the neck
2:02
as well as intracranially.
2:05
Contrecoup injuries will not include the scalp
2:08
or the fracture sites,
2:10
and they will include, however,
2:13
your epidural hematomas and subdural hematomas
2:16
and subarachnoid hemorrhage.
2:17
Most contusions and parenchymal hematomas occur contrecoup,
2:22
and you may also see the effects of the pseudo aneurysm
2:28
bleeding, et cetera, in the contrecoup fashion.
2:31
This is a series of CT scans in which one can see the
2:37
scalp swelling overlying the anterior left frontal region.
2:42
Here on these images,
2:44
we see superficial to the calvarium swelling of the scalp
2:48
on multiple images,
2:50
this would define the coup portion of the injury.
2:54
We would look on bone windows to see whether
2:57
or not there was a fracture of the
3:00
calvarium underlying the soft tissue swelling.
3:03
You'll note also that there is a focus of hemorrhage along
3:09
the anterior surface of the left frontal lobe,
3:13
where there is a small contusion of the cortex
3:17
of the left frontal lobe.
3:20
However,
3:21
you'll also note that the patient has a lesion opposite from
3:26
direction of the coup injury in the
3:30
right parietal occipital region,
3:32
which is actually larger than the coup injury.
3:36
And this is, again, what I would characterize as a
3:39
parenchymal hematoma.
3:40
And this is a contrecoup injury.
3:44
It has some surrounding edema.
3:46
And this surrounding edema will increase over time and
3:50
lead to greater mass effect over the course of the initial
3:54
three to five days after a traumatic injury to the brain.
3:58
So, I think this is a nice example of how one has evidence
4:02
of both coup, as well as contrecoup injury in a patient.
4:08
One other thing to highlight,
4:11
and that is the density of the posterior
4:14
falx in this patient.
4:16
So, one sees that the falx is slightly hyperdense
4:22
and it extends to the superior sagittal sinus.
4:25
This is a small subdural hematoma along the posterior falx.
4:31
And you see that contrasted with the normal
4:34
appearance of the falx further anteriorly.
4:38
This is another example of a coup contrecoup injury.
4:42
Here we have a brain window and a bone window of the same slices.
4:50
One sees the scalp swelling of the coup injury.
4:54
And in this instance,
4:55
one also sees an underlying fracture,
4:58
if I remove my arrowhead,
5:01
where the patient has right temporal bone fracture
5:05
of the squamosal portion of the temporal bone.
5:08
However,
5:09
after looking at the coup portion of the abnormality,
5:14
one should, of course, look contrecoup.
5:16
And what does one see contrecoup?
5:18
You see a contusion.
5:20
So, why am I calling this a contusion?
5:22
It's not as dense and well defined
5:24
as what I would call a hematoma.
5:26
It's a little bit of a bruise to the brain and you
5:29
do see some blood products, but in addition,
5:31
there's some edema from these little micro
5:34
hemorrhages in the left temporal lobe.
5:37
So, another example of a coup contrecoup injury with soft
5:41
tissue swelling and fracture coup and
5:43
a parenchymal contusion contrecoup.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.