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Neurosurgical Intervention of Posterior Fossa Bleeding

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Because of the well-confined nature of the posterior fossa,

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deliminated by the tentorium and the foramen magnum.

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Traumatic lesions of the posterior fossa are

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considered separately by the neurosurgeons

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for indications of surgery.

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So it is said that patients who have mass effect on the

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CT scan or neurologic dysfunction who deteriorate,

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are surgical indications for the posterior fossa.

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So mass effect on CT, by that,

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they're referring to any type of compression or

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distortion or rotation of the fourth

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ventricle or the basal cisterns.

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Or if that compression of the fourth ventricle,

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or the cerebral aqueduct leads to obstructive hydrocephalus,

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it would require surgical intervention.

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This is an example of a patient who has a large posterior

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fossa hematoma, in this case,

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a parenchymal hematoma.

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And there is mass effect, as you can see,

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on the upper fourth ventricle,

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it being displaced to the left side.

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Not only that,

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but the normal CSF around the basal cisterns have been

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obliterated secondary to the mass effect of

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the intraparenchymal hematoma.

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Hence, this would be a surgical indication

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for intervention for evacuation of the hematoma.

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In some circumstances,

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they may actually not perform the

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evacuation of the hematoma,

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but instead do what's called a suboccipital craniectomy.

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With that,

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they remove the posterior fossa bone

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and therefore allow the brain to expand outward

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through the defect that the absent bone has created,

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and thereby take the pressure off

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of the brainstem or the foramen magnum

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where the tonsils may be herniating.

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Remember, that need not be an intraparenchymal hematoma

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that leads to compression of the basal cisterns

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or the fourth ventricle.

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This is an example of a patient

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who has an epidural hematoma.

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We will be talking about that shortly.

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Due to an injury to the venous sinus,

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in this case the transverse sinus.

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This mass effect from this hematoma is causing some

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effacement of the basal cisterns

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around the perimesencephalic cistern.

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This again,

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would lead to an indication for surgical intervention.

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Although we're not at the level of the fourth ventricle,

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we can see that the midline structures are being

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shifted from left to right in this individual.

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When would they observe a patient who has hemorrhage in

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the posterior fossa?

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If the patient has no mass effect demonstrated on CT,

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and is not demonstrating neurologic dysfunction,

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referable to the posterior fossa,

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then they would do serial scanning.

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As I said, generally in our institution,

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they will be scanning every 6 hours,

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for about 24 hours,

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and then on a 24-hour basis while in the hospital.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Vascular Imaging

Vascular

Trauma

Skull Base

Neuroradiology

Interventional

Emergency

CT

Brain

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