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Case: Anoxic Brain Injury

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This was a patient who was found down.

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Unconscious. Initial CT scan was negative.

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The patient remained unresponsive.

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They recommended an MRI scan.

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The MRI scan is performed, and here on the FLAIR

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scan, what we see is abnormal symmetric bilateral

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high signal intensity in the globus pallidus.

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In the near region of the thalamus, as

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well as in the caudate nucleus, as well

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as high signal intensity bilaterally and

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symmetrically in the medial temporal lobes.

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Despite the fact that this patient was found

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down and unconscious, you can see that there's

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considerable motion artifact that's probably from

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a respirator or a ventilator that's being used

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to support this patient.

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There also is high signal intensity in

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the substantia nigra in this patient.

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If you look at the cortical margin in the parietal

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region, you see that it's a little bit thicker

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than usual and a little bit more blurred, not

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just because of the patient motion artifact.

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This suggests that there is an element

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of cerebral edema in this patient.

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The next sequence that was looked at

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was the diffusion-weighted imaging.

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This is DWI.

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I am gonna wind this a little bit better.

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So on the DWI sequence, you see that the

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caudate finding shows restricted diffusion.

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There's all this cortical high signal intensity

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also bilaterally that, in retrospect, maybe

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we should have called on the FLAIR scan, but

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was obscured by the patient motion artifact.

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We noticed that the thalami, as well as the globus

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pallidus region, also show high signal intensity.

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And there is high signal intensity

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in the medial temporal lobe.

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This constellation of findings of involvement

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bilaterally and symmetrically in the medial

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temporal lobe, in the globus pallidus, and

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for that matter, in the cerebral cortex, is

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indicative of an anoxic-ischemic injury.

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This is the pattern that we also see with carbon

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monoxide poisoning in those patients who have a

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hypoventilatory, hypoxic injury to the brain.

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And this is a severe involvement.

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Thalamic involvement is much more severe in

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this diffuse involvement of the cerebral cortex.

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All of this is going to be dead brain, and

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obviously, the patient is going to be doing very

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poorly and possibly in a coma for a period of time.

Report

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Neuroradiology

Metabolic

MRI

Emergency

Brain

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