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Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
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2 topics, 7 min.
8 topics, 32 min.
16 topics, 1 hr. 11 min.
Cerebellar Hematoma with Tonsillar Hernia
3 m.Intraventricular Hemorrhage
5 m.Parenchymal and Subdural Hematoma
5 m.Retroclival Subdural Hematoma
3 m.Acute on Chronic Subdural Hematoma
3 m.Midline Shift
4 m.Recurrent Subdural Hematoma
4 m.Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
5 m.Follow-up Imaging of Brain Trauma
6 m.Venous Epidural Hematoma
3 m.Venous Sinus vs. Arterial Epidural Hematomas
7 m.Evolution of Epidural and Subdural Hematomas
4 m.Diffuse Axonal Injury
9 m.Lucid Interval in Epidural Hematomas
3 m.Brainstem Hemorrhage
8 m.Pediatric Skull Fractures
7 m.6 topics, 28 min.
4 topics, 18 min.
14 topics, 1 hr. 6 min.
Secondary Traumatic Injuries
2 m.Traumatic Intracranial Dissection
5 m.Vertebral Artery Dissection, Pseudoaneurysm
6 m.Arteriographic Evaluation of Dissection
4 m.Traumatic Dissection of the MCA
4 m.Overview of Brain Herniation Types
5 m.Mechanisms of Brain Herniations
9 m.Herniation resulting in Infarction
9 m.Acute Hemorrhage on MRI
6 m.Subacute Hematoma on MRI
7 m.Chronic Hematoma on MRI
8 m.Hyperacute Hematoma on MRI
2 m.CT of Blood
3 m.Brain Trauma Summary
3 m.0:01
Well, I hope that the cases that we have reviewed
0:03
in some of the PowerPoint slides
0:05
have emphasized the need for an organized
0:08
approach to the imaging of patients
0:10
who have had head trauma.
0:12
I've emphasized the use of looking at the soft tissues of
0:16
the scalp and the skull in order to identify, for example,
0:20
the area where the brain or the tissue has been hit
0:25
initially in the coup portion of the damage,
0:28
and then looking opposite that for contrecoup injuries.
0:32
We've emphasized extra-axial collections,
0:34
including epidural hematomas
0:36
and subdural hematomas,
0:38
and the surgical criteria for removal of those collections.
0:43
We also talked about gray matter and white matter injuries
0:46
and the gray-white matter junction injuries,
0:49
particularly as it relates to contusions of the brain,
0:53
parenchymal hematomas, and at the gray-white junction,
0:58
axonal injury.
0:59
Finally, we looked at deep injuries
1:01
that may occur either primarily
1:04
secondary to hematomas,
1:05
or as a consequence of the hemorrhage
1:10
and/or the mass effect associated with the hemorrhage.
1:13
I've also discussed the evolution of hemorrhage over
1:16
the course of time both on CT as well as MRI,
1:20
and what to look for and how to best age the hemorrhage
1:24
as far as whether it represents acute, early subacute,
1:28
late subacute, or chronic hematoma.
1:31
Finally, we went over a number of the secondary injuries that
1:34
can occur after the primary traumatic brain damage,
1:38
and those include vascular injuries such as dissections
1:42
or pseudoaneurysms or strokes,
1:44
or the effect of the mass in the brain,
1:49
leading to herniations.
1:51
We discussed the various herniations,
1:53
including subfalcine herniation, uncal herniation,
1:57
transtentorial herniation, upward cerebellar,
2:00
and downward cerebellar herniations.
2:02
Having an organized approach will allow you to best
2:06
gauge the degree of damage of the brain,
2:09
and utilizing both CT and MRI
2:11
will give a complete prognostic report to the clinicians
2:16
as far as the ultimate outcome.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
Well, I hope that the cases that we have reviewed
0:03
in some of the PowerPoint slides
0:05
have emphasized the need for an organized
0:08
approach to the imaging of patients
0:10
who have had head trauma.
0:12
I've emphasized the use of looking at the soft tissues of
0:16
the scalp and the skull in order to identify, for example,
0:20
the area where the brain or the tissue has been hit
0:25
initially in the coup portion of the damage,
0:28
and then looking opposite that for contrecoup injuries.
0:32
We've emphasized extra-axial collections,
0:34
including epidural hematomas
0:36
and subdural hematomas,
0:38
and the surgical criteria for removal of those collections.
0:43
We also talked about gray matter and white matter injuries
0:46
and the gray-white matter junction injuries,
0:49
particularly as it relates to contusions of the brain,
0:53
parenchymal hematomas, and at the gray-white junction,
0:58
axonal injury.
0:59
Finally, we looked at deep injuries
1:01
that may occur either primarily
1:04
secondary to hematomas,
1:05
or as a consequence of the hemorrhage
1:10
and/or the mass effect associated with the hemorrhage.
1:13
I've also discussed the evolution of hemorrhage over
1:16
the course of time both on CT as well as MRI,
1:20
and what to look for and how to best age the hemorrhage
1:24
as far as whether it represents acute, early subacute,
1:28
late subacute, or chronic hematoma.
1:31
Finally, we went over a number of the secondary injuries that
1:34
can occur after the primary traumatic brain damage,
1:38
and those include vascular injuries such as dissections
1:42
or pseudoaneurysms or strokes,
1:44
or the effect of the mass in the brain,
1:49
leading to herniations.
1:51
We discussed the various herniations,
1:53
including subfalcine herniation, uncal herniation,
1:57
transtentorial herniation, upward cerebellar,
2:00
and downward cerebellar herniations.
2:02
Having an organized approach will allow you to best
2:06
gauge the degree of damage of the brain,
2:09
and utilizing both CT and MRI
2:11
will give a complete prognostic report to the clinicians
2:16
as far as the ultimate outcome.
Report
Description
Faculty
David M Yousem, MD, MBA
Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean
Johns Hopkins University
Tags
Vascular Imaging
Vascular
Trauma
Spine
Physics and Basic Science
Pediatrics
Non-infectious Inflammatory
Neuroradiology
Neck soft tissues
Metabolic
MRI
Interventional
Head and Neck
Fluoroscopy
Emergency
CT
Brain
Bone & Soft Tissues
Angiography
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