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Case: Imaging of Sinus Thrombosis

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I want to alert you to one of the potential

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pitfalls of the analysis of sagittal sinus

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thrombosis using MR and MR venogram.

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This is a sagittal T1-weighted scan, and what

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you see on this sagittal T1-weighted scan is

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bright signal intensity in the superior sagittal

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sinus in the vast majority of the vessel.

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Now, this patient underwent MR venography,

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and what you see on the MR venography is

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that the vessel appears to be patent.

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This is a reminder that time-of-flight MR

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venography is a T1-weighted sequence,

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and therefore, if you have a clot on a T1-weighted scan

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that is already bright, it will superimpose,

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as if it is a patent vessel, despite the

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fact that this is a clotted vessel.

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In other words, the bright signal on this time-

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of-flight venogram is not because of flow,

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it's because of subacute methemoglobin in the vessel.

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So, it's not flow; it's T1 shine-through.

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In other words, it's bright on T1 from the clot,

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and it looks like it's flow, but it really is not.

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The way to get around this, if you are worried,

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is to do something called a phase contrast

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MR venogram. On a phase contrast venogram,

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it is not a T1-weighted sequence, and therefore,

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the absence of demonstration of the superior

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sagittal sinus on this phase contrast MRV

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shows that the vessel is thrombosed with

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bright signal intensity subacute

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32 00:01:52,875 --> 00:01:56,565 clot. With regard to sinus thrombosis,

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remember that the likelihood of a venous infarction

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is around 70%, and the likelihood of hemorrhage in

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association with venous infarction is around 70%.

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So, you can have sinus thrombosis without

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having an infarct, and you can have

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infarcts without having hemorrhage,

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but the majority of them will be hemorrhagic.

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The sinus that is thrombosed most commonly is the

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superior sagittal sinus, and it seems, if I see

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that most commonly in children and young adults,

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whereas the transverse sinus or sigmoid sinus

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thrombosis, I see more commonly in individuals

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who have inflammatory disease of otomastoiditis.

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These will also show a high rate of

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thrombosis. With regard to the deep veins,

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usually, the internal cerebral vein is the most

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common deep vein as opposed to a sinus,

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and that is more common than the vein of Galen.

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Again, you may have normal parenchyma

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on the MRI scan, suggesting that you can have either deep

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vein thrombosis or sinus thrombosis without parenchymal

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injury, and within the parenchyma, it is variable

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as to whether this is vasogenic or cytotoxic edema.

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Cytotoxic meaning a stroke with dead cells, vasogenic

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meaning just a backup of pressure, which leads to edema.

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So, this is from an article looking at

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the DWI patterns with venous thrombosis.

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And what you see is that you can have heterogeneous

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signal intensity, bright and dark on the ADC value—

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on the ADC maps, which suggests both restricted diffusion

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because of cytotoxic edema, as well as enhanced

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diffusion from vasogenic edema.

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Similarly, you may have high

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signal intensity on the DWI scan.

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That is purely a stroke that is low

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on ADC maps, and you can have the clot

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itself, which may be bright on the DWI.

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This, again, may or may not be associated

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with a parenchymal abnormality.

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So, high signal intensity on DWI has a

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lower signal sensitivity but a higher

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specificity than high signal intensity on T2

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for diagnosing cortical vein thrombosis.

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So, in other words, while if you do see the dark

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signal on the ADC map, it does imply cytotoxic edema.

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There are cases of sinus thrombosis

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where you merely have vasogenic edema.

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Not only that, but there are examples

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where that restricted diffusion may

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reverse when you have sinus thrombosis.

Report

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Vascular

Neuroradiology

MRV

Emergency

Brain

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