Interactive Transcript
0:01
The final component of a hematoma that we
0:03
talk about is chronic stage hematoma.
0:07
Chronic stage hematoma is dominated by
0:10
a compound called hemosiderin.
0:12
Now, hemosiderin also has proton relaxation enhancement.
0:18
Hemosiderin generally is concentrated within macrophages
0:23
that are eating the blood products.
0:26
At a late stage of the hematoma,
0:29
what happens is that macrophages leave the blood system,
0:33
cross the blood-brain barrier which has been disrupted by
0:36
the hematoma and start to chew away and eat up
0:39
the iron that is present in the hemoglobin.
0:42
It then gets converted to the hemosiderin product.
0:47
Hemosiderin is superparamagnetic, by that it has dramatic
0:52
T2 shortening effects and has dramatic Proton
0:56
Relaxation Enhancement. So proton relaxation enhancement.
1:00
Now one might say, well,
1:02
these macrophages don't they go back into the bloodstream
1:05
and take it to the liver and spleen?
1:08
They do in part.
1:09
But what we say is that the blood-brain barrier gets
1:13
reestablished and these poor macrophages are left behind
1:18
in tissue and therefore lead to tissue hemocytrine
1:22
concentration of the hemocytrine.
1:26
The other thing that may occur in
1:28
the same setting is ferritin.
1:30
Ferritin usually is not within a cell but
1:33
is deposited within the soft tissues.
1:35
And that too has T2 shortening effects.
1:38
So with chronic hematomas, hemocytrine,
1:44
you have dark signal intensity on T2.
1:47
Because of Proton Relaxation Enhancement,
1:49
you have low signal intensity on T1.
1:51
There is no methemoglobin,
1:53
no proton-electron dipole interaction.
1:56
And this is exquisitely well seen on gradient echo
1:59
and susceptibility-weighted imaging.
2:01
It is said that hemosiderin in the tissue
2:04
potentially can last forever.
2:07
You may see a little hemosiderin stain at autopsy on these
2:11
patients who have had trauma as a young adult.
2:14
This is a nice example of something that
2:17
is known as the hemosiderin slit.
2:20
So hemocytrine
2:23
slit in this case,
2:28
the patient had a hypertensive bleed
2:32
within the butamin years ago.
2:36
What you see is dark signal intensity on this T1
2:40
weighted scan as well as hemosiderin staining
2:45
on the T2 weighted scan.
2:48
In addition, you might note that there is volume loss.
2:52
So if we go from the edge of the third ventricle,
2:55
go to the Sylvian Fisher here and we compare
2:58
the distance versus the edge of.
3:00
The third ventricle to the Sylvian fissure on the
3:03
left side, you see that there is loss of volume.
3:06
That's because at one point there was a hematoma here,
3:09
but with the loss of volume,
3:12
as the hematoma has contracted,
3:14
it goes down to a hemosiderin slit.
3:18
You can also demonstrate this by the proximity of the
3:22
hemocytrin to the Sylvian fissure here versus the
3:25
butamin over here that has underlying tissue.
3:28
Before you get to the Sylvian fissure over here,
3:31
hemosiderin dark on T1,
3:34
dark on T2 because of proton relaxation enhancement.
3:39
This is an example of a FLAIR scan
3:44
and a Susceptibility-weighted scan.
3:48
You note that on the FLAIR scan,
3:50
which is a fast bane echo technique with
3:52
multiple 180-degree refocusing pulses,
3:55
there is no evidence of hemorrhage on the FLAIR scan.
3:58
What you see is a little bit of bright signal intensity on
4:01
the FLAIR representing small vessel
4:04
chronic ischemic changes.
4:08
However,
4:09
on the Susceptibility-weighted scan,
4:12
we see lots of little dots of dark signal intensity
4:16
that are not evident on the FLAIR scan.
4:21
At the same level.
4:22
These are dots of hemosiderin from a patient who had
4:28
previous head trauma and had shearing injury.
4:31
At the gray-white junction,
4:34
there is no edema on the FLAIR scan.
4:36
All you see is dark signal intensity,
4:39
proton relaxation enhancement secondary to hemocytrine
4:44
on the Susceptibility-weighted scan.
4:48
This is another example just demonstrating how sensitive
4:53
Susceptibility-weight imaging is compared to
4:56
fast bane echo T2 aid and FLAIR scan,
5:00
T2-weight scan, FLAIR scan,
5:04
susceptibility-weight scan with no evidence of hemorrhage
5:08
that you would report on the MRI scan on T2 or FLAIR.
5:13
And yet multiple areas of hemorrhage demonstrated on
5:18
Susceptibility weight scan. Why do I emphasize this point?
5:22
If you are not including susceptibility weighted
5:25
imaging in your trauma protocol,
5:29
you will miss areas of hemorrhage on your other pulse
5:33
sequences. Be it T2-weighted, be it FLAIR scanning,
5:38
be it diffusion-weighted imaging, please add SWI.
5:42
Sequences or if you do not have susceptibility weight
5:47
scans available, gradient echo scans in order to detect
5:51
subtle areas of hemorrhage that would otherwise be missed.
5:55
A final word about hemorrhage subarachnoid.
6:00
Hemorrhage, as seen on the CT scan to your left,
6:04
is something that is difficult to identify on MRI scanning
6:09
because it resides in the oxygenated cerebrospinal fluid.
6:15
Here we see the subarachnoid hemorrhage in the basal
6:19
synth sterns in the interhemispheric fissure,
6:21
as well as in the Sylvian fissure on this FLAIR scan.
6:25
However,
6:26
we do see bright signal intensity in the Sylvian fissures
6:32
that otherwise would be dark in signal intensity like
6:36
CSF in the cerebrospinal fluid.
6:38
So on a FLAIR scan,
6:40
the PSI should be dark.
6:42
If you are seeing bright signal
6:44
intensity on the FLAIR scan,
6:47
it implies subarachnoid hemorrhage or meningitis or some
6:53
chemical in the CSF or oxygenation that is occurring as
7:00
part of intubation or supplemental oxygen being
7:04
given to the patient. For some reason,
7:06
that supplemental oxygen can dissolve in
7:09
the CSF and turn a FLAIR scan bright.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.