Interactive Transcript
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This is one of those classic stories that
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we sometimes talk about in neuroradiology.
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This was a patient who was evaluated for trauma,
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and as you can see from the CT scan, he's got
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bilateral subdural hematomas along the tentorium,
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as well as a subdural hematoma that is
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along the frontal convexities, extending to
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the temporal convexities and parietal convexities.
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And you also see that there's midline shift here.
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There's a lot of damage going on,
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as well as a parenchymal hemorrhage.
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In the medial left temporal lobe, there is
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subarachnoid hemorrhage in the basal cisterns.
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Well, when you look at the clinical history on this
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patient by going into the electronic medical record,
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what happened was that this patient had sudden
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onset of the worst headache of life while driving
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a car, and with that headache, crashed the car.
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So the headache preceded the motor vehicle
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accident, and this is that scenario
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where you're scratching your head—Is
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all this from trauma, or is it something
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related to that initial headache?
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In this particular instance, the patient's
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subarachnoid hemorrhage indicated that the
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patient probably had an aneurysm that bled, leading
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to that worst headache of life and crashing
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the car off the side of the road. Without that
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clinical history of the headache preceding
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the trauma,
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you would never know that.
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So, let's go and look at the associated angiogram.
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Here is the angiogram, and I'm just
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going to go to the money images here.
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You can see what's being measured is this very
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large posterior communicating artery aneurysm.
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Here's, um, a little bit more of a
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scene from the coiling of the aneurysm,
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but here is the very large aneurysm.
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Here's a posterior
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cerebral branch posterior communicating artery aneurysm.
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This aneurysm burst into the medial left temporal lobe,
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as well as the subarachnoid space, leading to the patient
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having that severe headache and crashing the car.
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So the primary problem is the aneurysm rather than the
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trauma.
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I just wanna go back and make a few
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comments about aneurysms and head trauma.
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So, it is true that sometimes the trauma itself
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can lead to dissection of an intracranial vessel.
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The most common intracranial vessel to be
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dissected is the middle cerebral artery
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because of its length and its, um,
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pathway in a transverse dimension.
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When the middle cerebral artery is dissected,
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it may have a focal weakness in the blood
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vessel that can lead to a dissecting aneurysm.
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So, if you see a patient who has trauma and also has
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a middle cerebral artery distribution stroke, again—
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did the stroke lead to the trauma, or did the
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trauma lead to a dissection of the middle
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cerebral artery, either occluding it or leading to an
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aneurysm, which may be a setup for embolic phenomenon?
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So, this is another scenario where you may see a CTA
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performed even in the setting of clear head trauma.
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