Radiology of Head Trauma Flashcards

1
Q

What is the difference between a primary and secondary intraventricular hemorrhage?

A

Primary - due to tumor, lesion, or hypertension

Secondary - extension from another hemorrhage usually due to hypertension or trauma

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2
Q

What is an accumulation of CSF in the subdural space?

A

Subdural Hygroma

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3
Q

What imaging modality is best to identify the age of a hemorrhage?

A

MRI - breakdown of heme creates different appearance on imaging

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4
Q

Aneurysms are most associated with what type of hemorrhage?

A

Subarachnoid hemorrhage

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5
Q

How does a subdural hygroma appear on a CT scan?

A

Hypodense - as compared with blood that appears hyperdense

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6
Q

True/False. In a subarachnoid hemorrhage, blood follows the sulci.

A

True

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7
Q

A patient comes to the ED and is diagnosed with a venous hemorrhage. What is the most likely type of hemorrhage present?

A

Subdural hemorrhage - these have better prognoses due to slower blood accumulation. Often due to tearing of bridging veins

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8
Q

What is the most common type of traumatic cranial bleed?

A

Subdural hematoma

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9
Q

How does blood from an acute hemorrhage appear on a CT?

A

Hyperdense

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10
Q

What is the best imaging modality to diagnosis a diffuse axonal injury?

A

MRI (Gradient and FLAIR) - not seen on CT unless there is bleeding

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11
Q

What is the primary imaging modality used in head trauma?

A

CT without contrast

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12
Q

A fracture of this bone often presents with battle sign, CSF otorrhea, and sensorineural hearing loss.

A

Temporal bone fracture

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13
Q

A patient has an epidural hemorrhage. What is the likely source of the bleeding?

A

An artery (often MCA) - poorer prognosis due to rapid blood accumulation. Epidural bleeds also respect suture lines

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14
Q

Where are intraparenchymal hematomas most commonly found?

A

Frontal & temporal lobes

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15
Q

This type of head injury has a “train track-like” appearance.

A

Skull fracture - two hyperdense lines can be seen on either side

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16
Q

This type of hemorrhage appears crescent-shaped.

A

Subdural hemorrhage

17
Q

This type of hemorrhage appears lens- or pear-shaped.

A

Epidural hemorrhage

18
Q

A fracture of this bone often presents with raccoon eyes and CSF rhinorrhea.

A

Sphenoid bone fracture

19
Q

This type of imaging modality has the best sensitivity for non-hemorrhagic head trauma.

A

MRI