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Volume 1, Case 1 Answers
This CT scan was done without
IV contrast. It was read as a posterior inter-hemispheric subdural hematoma.
It shows blood in the subdural space and an increased density (whiter than
it should be) of the posterior falx secondary to a posterior inter-hemispheric
subdural hematoma. Other clinical findings and a social investigation confirmed
the etiology as shaken baby syndrome.
Teaching Points:
- Although the falx may enhance
with IV contrast, an increased density of the posterior falx before
IV contrast is administered should raise the suspicion of a posterior
interhemispheric subdural hematoma. This injury is highly indicative
of a shaken baby. Other findings such as retinal hemorrhages and a suspicious
history add to the strength of this etiology.
- An experienced physician
who has done many lumbar punctures in infants usually knows when to
expect bloody CSF due to the difficulty of the procedure. If bloody
CSF is unexpectedly encountered, and it does not clear, one should be
highly suspicious of intracerebral hemorrhage with blood entering the
subarachnoid space.
- Although blood should not
appear in the CSF if the hemorrhage is purely subdural, this injury
is not purely subdural in nature. Blood also enters the subarachnoid
space. Axonal shearing and generalized cerebral cellular injury take
place as well.
- A full fontanelle is not
always indicative of meningitis. Intracerebral hemorrhage, cerebral
edema, and acute hydrocephalus can all mimic the same clinical features.
- Trauma specialists have
often taught that intracranial hemorrhage alone cannot account for all
the blood loss in a patient in hypovolemic shock. In other words, if
you have diagnosed an intracerebral hemorrhage in a trauma patient in
hypovolemic shock, you must look elsewhere for additional hemorrhaging
sites, such as in the abdomen. Infants appear to violate this rule since
many shaken babies present to the emergency department in shock. Although
one must always be suspicious of other hemorrhaging sites from injuries
such as from fractures and internal injuries, subsequent work-ups on
these patients may fail to identify significant hemorrhaging sites other
than in the brain.
- CT scans may fail to show
a posterior inter-hemispheric subdural hematoma if it is small. MRI
scanning has been shown to be more sensitive at identifying these hemorrhages
and other brain injuries.
References:
- Ludwig S. Child Abuse.
In: Fleisher GR, Ludwig S, eds. Textbook of Pediatric Emergency Medicine,
third edition. Baltimore, MD, Williams and Wilkins, 1993, p. 1437.
- Bogost GA, Crues JV, Moser
FG. MR Imaging in the Evaluation of Trauma. Emergency Radiology 1994;1(1):1-14.
- Sklar EM, Quencer RM, Bowen
BC, Altman N, Villanueva PA. Magnetic resonance applications in cerebral
injury. Radiology Clinics of North America 1992;30(2):353-366.
- Barkovich AJ. Chapter 4
- Destructive Brain Disorders of Childhood. In: Pediatric Neuroimaging,
second edition. New York, Raven Press, 1995, pp. 167-170.
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Loren Yamamoto, MD,
MPH Associate Professor of Pediatrics University of Hawaii John A. Burns
School of Medicine loreny@hawaii.edu
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