Interactive Transcript
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The marker for subacute hematoma
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is the compound of methemoglobin.
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As I mentioned, Methemoglobin
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has the particular chemical characteristics of
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proton-electron dipole-dipole interaction,
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which allows
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water protons to approach the Methemoglobin molecule
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in a way that leads to
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T1 shortening.
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T1 shortening
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is represented by high signal intensity
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on a T1-weighted image.
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In the early
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subsequent phase.
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This meant hemoglobin
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is within the intact red blood cell.
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Therefore
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you have a concentration of charge inside the cell
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versus outside the cell.
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This leads to
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proton relaxation enhancement
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1-bar magnet effect, such that water protons
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see an inhomogeneous magnetic field
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with a concentration of charge inside the cell
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different than the concentration of charge outside the cell
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leading to T2 shortening.
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So you have both proton-electron dipole-dipole interaction
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which leads to bright signal intensity on T1,
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and you have proton relaxation enhancement
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which leads to T2 shortening, which is dark
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on a T2-weighted scan.
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Proton-electron dipole-dipole interaction, I said,
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is field-strength independent.
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You have intact red blood cells and the timing for
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intracellular
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Methemoglobin is at about 04:57 days.
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Here we have a T1-weighted scan
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and here we have a T2-weighted scan.
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What one sees is
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bright signal intensity on the T1-weighted scan,
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which is
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extending from the periphery
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to centrally within this hematoma.
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Both the bright parts as well as the dark parts
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are black
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on. The T2-weighted scan
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you know also that there is surrounding edema
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associated with hematoma.
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What exactly are we seeing?
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What we are seeing is Methemoglobin
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filling in the deoxyhemoglobin
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from the periphery to centrally,
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starts peripherally and then moves centrally
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whether there is
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bright signal intensity
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or dark signal intensity on the T1-weighted scan.
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Both of them are dark on the T2-weighted scan.
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Why is that intracellular Methemoglobin?
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Because the intact red blood cell
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leads to
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proton relaxation enhancement with concentration of
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charge in and out
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will lead to proton relaxation enhancement
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on T2 imaging.
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Similarly, deoxyhemoglobin,
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which is intracellular,
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leads to proton
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relaxation enhancement across the
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intact red blood cell membrane,
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and that too
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leads to dark signal intensity on tetuated imaging.
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The bright is merely vasogenic edema,
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not blood proxy around the hematoma.
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Late subacute hematoma is characterized by
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extracellular methemoglobin.
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The methemoglobin molecule.
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Whether it's intracellular or extracellular
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has proton-electron dipole-dipole interaction
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and therefore
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leads to high signal intensity on T1-weighted scan.
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However, what has happened at this point
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is that that methemoglobin molecule
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is in a setting of cellular lysis.
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The cellular membrane is no longer intact
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and therefore the methemoglobin is free to diffuse
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from intracellular to extracellular.
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Therefore, we
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no longer
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have separation of charge by the red blood cell
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membrane, therefore we no longer have
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proton relaxation enhancement
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so petty. Without Puri
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because there's no longer proton relaxation enhancement,
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what we see is
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bright signal intensity on T2-weighted scan,
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so proton relaxation enhancement leads to
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dark signal intensity on T2-weighted scan.
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If you have cellular lysis
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an absence of proton relaxation enhancement,
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it will be bright
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on the T2-weight scan.
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This usually occurs
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from about 5 days after the initial hematoma
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Within about 2 weeks after. 105 00:04:45,520 --> 00:04:48,840 Remember that you no longer have an intact
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red blood cell.
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How's it look when emirai?
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This is your T1-weight scan,
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this is your T2-weight scan.
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On the T1-weight scan we have a hematoma
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that is bright in signal intensity.
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This is due to proton-electron dipole-dipole interaction
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on the T2-weight scan.
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The hematoma is bright
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because
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there is no longer proton relaxation enhancement.
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We also note that instead of surrounding edema,
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there's no bright signal surrounding edema
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because this is late subacute,
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the edema has resolved
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instead what we have
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is dark signal intensity around the periphery.
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This we will soon learn is hemosiderin.
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Hemosiderin is dark
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on T2-weight scanning
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and
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dark on T1-weight scanning,
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so this is late.
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Subacute
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hematoma
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with extracellular methemoglobin
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demonstrating proton-electron dipole-dipole interaction
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without proton relaxation enhancement.
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Here is another example of saying
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this is a hemorrhagic infarct
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on the T1-weight scan. With this infarct
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we see bright signal. Intensity methemoglobin,
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but on the gradient echo scan there's no
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dark signal
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and therefore there is no proton relaxation enhancement.
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Therefore because it's bright and bright it' must be
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extracellular and hemoglobin.
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If it was
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intracerebral methemoglobin we would have
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dark signal intensity
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areas of hemorrhage in the stroke.
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