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Non-accidental Trauma, Retinal Hemorrhage

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0:01

This was a three-month-old who was found to be unconscious

0:05

when the parents came back and found

0:09

the child with their caregiver.

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The CT scan is remarkable for a large amount of hemorrhage

0:17

at the superior aspect of the brain.

0:20

This type of hemorrhage,

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which is seen just at the subarachnoid

0:25

space and gray matter junction,

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is not unusual in children who have had a

0:30

traumatic brain injury. As you can see,

0:32

this is a bilateral process which is just on the surface

0:35

of the brain extending into the subarachnoid space.

0:39

In addition,

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you will note that the patient has a hemorrhage along

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the posterior temporal lobe on the left side,

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and it looks as if there is a low-density extra-axial

0:53

collection overlying the lateral aspect

0:56

of the left temporal lobe.

0:59

As well.

1:00

You also see a small amount of low-density fluid

1:04

overlying the frontal lobes. In addition,

1:07

one can see subarachnoid hemorrhage that is

1:10

present in the right frontal convexities.

1:15

When one has extra-axial collections

1:19

of multiple ages in a child,

1:23

one has to consider nonaccidental trauma or child abuse.

1:29

For this patient,

1:30

we want to be particularly aware

1:32

of the potential for fractures.

1:34

So we will look at the thin-section bone images.

1:37

We will reconstruct them into three

1:39

D to look for calvarial fractures.

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If one has these multiple-aged hemorrhages in a child,

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one usually will call the clinician and say that

1:50

you have a concern for nonaccidental trauma.

1:53

At that juncture,

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the child will likely get a series of plain films to look

1:58

for rib fractures or metaphyseal fractures or

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other signs of child abuse.

2:05

In this case,

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the patient was doing much worse than was

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apparent based on the initial CT scan.

2:13

If you look at the coronal reconstructions of the

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axial CT data, you see what I was talking about,

2:20

where sometimes it's difficult to tell where this

2:22

hemorrhage is in the gray matter itself or just layering

2:26

along the surface of the brain in the subarachnoid space

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or along the PIA. And this patient, as you can see,

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has areas of sort of flame-shaped hemorrhage that's

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going into the subarachnoid space as well as,

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as I described previously, the low-density,

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older extra-axial collections.

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So an MRI scan was subsequently ordered.

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This is the MRI scan of the same patient.

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This is the flare image where we have dark signal.

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Intensity CSF.

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And you can see that there are low signal intensity

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collections overlying the frontal lobes bilaterally

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representing chronic subdural hematomas. In addition,

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more superiorly,

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you have the higher signal intensity blood products

3:17

along the high frontal convexities.

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This is the T2-weight scan.

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The T2-weight and again demonstrates

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the extra-axial low density,

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in this case, high signal intensity collections.

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How do we know this is not the subarachnoid space?

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If one sees that the Dura margin is displaced

3:41

inward or the vessels are displaced inward,

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that implies that these are subdural collections.

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So blood vessels displaced inward and not crossing the CSF

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space suggests that these are chronic subdural hematomas

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rather than just dilatation of the subarachnoid space

4:00

where the blood vessels would course freely

4:03

within the entire subarachnoid space.

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Here you can see the acute blood products represented

4:09

by dark signal intensity on T2-weight imaging

4:12

overlying the high frontal convexities

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as well as the parietal convexities.

4:21

The patient had a diffusion-weight scan as well,

4:28

and one sees that there does appear to be some

4:31

higher signal intensity posteriorly in the

4:36

subcortical white matter.

4:40

Here, on the gradient echo scans,

4:43

you see the blood products in the subarachnoid space

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marked as the dark signal intensity overlying

4:49

both frontal and parietal convexities.

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All this darker signal intensity representing blood

4:55

products in the cortex and the subarachnoid space.

4:59

You can also have a better appreciation

5:02

of the extra-axial collections

5:05

that are present.

5:10

There is an additional finding that

5:12

I would like to point out

5:14

that was present in this patient and that is

5:21

the finding associated with the retina.

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This is

5:29

demonstrated.

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I'm going to try to magnify here by the irregular

5:38

margination of the posterior globe membranes.

5:44

You can see that there are areas that are crenated

5:49

at the posterior portion of the globe.

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These areas represent.

6:00

Retinal hemorrhages.

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Retinal hemorrhage.

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It is a very sensitive marker for nonaccidental

6:10

trauma or child abuse.

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Finally,

6:13

I want to demonstrate one other finding in this patient

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and that is the presence of high signal intensity

6:26

within the posterior portion of the brain.

6:31

And this

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seemed best on one of these sequences,

6:39

which is the diffusion-weight imaging.

6:43

What can happen in a patient who has had nonaccidental

6:46

trauma is that you can have expression of Glutamate from

6:52

the injury to the brain from Shaken Baby Syndrome that

6:57

Glutamate expression is cytotoxic to the brain tissue as

7:04

it comes out of the neurotransmitter and

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then leads to injury to the brain.

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This then is yet another of the findings that can be seen

7:14

in a patient with nonaccidental trauma and that is diffuse

7:17

cerebral edema secondary to the expression of

7:21

Glutamate from the traumatized brain.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Vascular Imaging

Vascular

Trauma

Syndromes

Pediatrics

Orbit

Non-infectious Inflammatory

Neuroradiology

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

Head and Neck

Emergency

CT

Brain

Bone & Soft Tissues

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