CNS Trauma: Imaging Flashcards

1
Q

Outcome of occipital impact?

A
  • scalp haematoma (potentially w/ underlying fracture)
  • bleeding beneath skull (epidural/extradral or subdural haematoma
  • haemorrhagic contusion (bleeding withing brain)
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2
Q

CT scan: “concave shape” and prognosis?

A

Extra-dural -> kills you through coning (herniation of brain through tentorium + foramen magnum)->

[pressure on the brainstem -> death through stopping breathing or CVS (BP regulation) problems]

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3
Q

CT scan: “irregular margin”

A

Subdural]- fresh blood is what is visible usually

Note that old blood looks similar to brain on CT- can be hard to identify large subdurals

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4
Q

How to treat extra-dural or subdural haematoma?

A

Release pressure: Craniectomy or burr-hole to relieve pressure (depending on size etc)

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5
Q

If image is unclear but brain appears swollen and pt is unconscious

A

You want to know pressure: put pressure probe (ICP pressure monitor) into brain

NB: NO LP AS YOU ARE WORRIED ABOUT CONING, and you don’t know if you need to relieve pressure or not

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6
Q

Common sites of TBI (e.g. haemorrhagic contusions)

A

Orbito-frontal cortex and temporal poles

NB: because brain is knocked forward and collides against sharp point within skull

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7
Q

Why we see discrepancies between what is seen on scans and the symptoms of TBI pts?

A

Diffuse axonal injury

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8
Q

Describe mechanism of diffuse axonal injury (DAI)

A

Lots of force applied to brain damages long distance axons (particularly vulnerable)

You have essentially disconnected massive parts of brain

(might not be visible on CT)

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9
Q

Alternative ways of using imaging on diffuse axonal injury?

A

Diffusion tensor imaging (from MRI scanner): you can view structure of white matter

[also good for MS and stroke]

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10
Q

How does diffuse axonal injury affect the functions of the brain?

A

[early TBI white matter damage]:
Disconnection and damage to wiring; inflammation and damage to protein transport along axons

Network disruption between diff, parts of the brain (default mode network)

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11
Q

Standard way of imaging for diffuse axonal injury

A

Susceptibilty weighted imaging (from MRI)

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12
Q

How susceptibilty weighted imaging works?

A

Blood contains haemosiderin, making it (para-)magnetic

Haemorrhages leave iron in the brain, which can be seen on this scan

[good to see microbleeds + linear vascular injury]

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13
Q

Most common distribution of injury location in susceptibility weighted imaging?

A

Parafalcine distribution (on one side of falx- where forces are highest)

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14
Q

Relationship between TBI and dementia?

A

Repeated head traumas can cause increased tau and amyloid (just like dementia)]- but the locations of these differ between the two

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