Upcoming Events
Log In
Pricing
Free Trial

Extra-Axial Bleeding Overview

HIDE
PrevNext

0:00

I'd like to begin now with a discussion

0:03

of extra-axial collections.

0:06

Extra-axial collections are generally categorized

0:10

into epidural hematomas and subdural hematomas.

0:14

I'd like to use this illustration to distinguish the two.

0:18

This red collection

0:22

is outside of the dura,

0:25

marked in purple.

0:28

As you can see,

0:30

it is associated with a skull fracture,

0:32

as well as an injury to the subjacent artery

0:36

depicted in red.

0:39

So this is an arterial bleed depicted in red.

0:42

It's outside the dura,

0:44

and therefore, this is what is termed an epidural hematoma.

0:49

Epidural hematomas are generally caused by injury to the

0:55

middle meningeal artery associated with temporal

0:59

bone fractures. Alternatively,

1:02

they occasionally will occur due to venous sinus injuries

1:07

where the blood collects outside of the dura.

1:10

Contrast that with this blue collection.

1:13

This is a subdural

1:17

hematoma. The subdural hematoma, as you can see,

1:21

is below the dura,

1:25

although still intracranially.

1:28

And this is due to tearing of shearing

1:33

veins that cross the subdural space.

1:37

It is generally of a venous etiology as

1:42

opposed to most of the epidurals,

1:45

which are arterial with the exception of those

1:48

that are associated with the venous sinus.

1:51

So these are veins as opposed to the venous sinus.

1:55

Let's talk a little bit more about the distinction between

1:58

epidural hematomas and subdural hematomas.

2:01

So, as I mentioned,

2:03

epidural hematomas are associated

2:04

with fractures in 90% of cases,

2:07

and they are usually caused by tearing of either the

2:10

dural venous sinus or the middle meningeal artery.

2:14

They are biconvex in their shape,

2:17

they're lenticular in shape,

2:20

and they are confined by sutures, but not the dura.

2:25

Epidural hematomas,

2:26

despite the fact that they're arterial in their etiology,

2:31

have a good prognosis. Subdural hematomas, however,

2:36

are due to bridging vein tears.

2:40

They usually occur over the convexities,

2:43

and they are usually crescentic in their shape.

2:48

So epidural is biconvex, subdural is crescentic.

2:54

These have a worse prognosis than epidural hematomas.

2:59

It doesn't make a lot of sense.

3:00

It's kept me awake at night.

3:03

Why is it that an epidural hematoma,

3:05

which is arterial in its etiology

3:08

and therefore higher pressure,

3:10

would have a better prognosis than those

3:13

patients who have subdural hematomas?

3:17

And the answer to that is that most of the subdural

3:19

hematomas are contracoup injuries, which means that

3:22

it's been a significant back and forth injury.

3:25

Whereas remember that epidural hematomas by virtue

3:27

of being associated with the fracture,

3:30

are usually at the coup and therefore detected relatively

3:33

early and treated earlier and are not as much

3:36

of a damage occurring to the brain.

3:41

With respect to extra-axial collections,

3:44

they usually do not contain hemosiderin as opposed to

3:48

parenchymal hemorrhages, and they can evolve into lower

3:54

density collections such that they look

3:56

almost as low density as dirty CSF.

4:00

And we will talk about things such as the ISO

4:03

dense subdural hematoma and the hypodense.

4:07

Chronic subdural hematoma and the subdural Hygroma.

4:13

Subdural hygromas are theoretically pure CSF collections

4:20

secondary to tearing of the meninges,

4:23

as opposed to chronic subdural hematomas,

4:26

which are a mixture of blood products and potentially CSF.

4:31

I want to talk at this point about subdural hematomas.

4:35

These are the indications for surgery as defined by the

4:40

Humans and Win 7th edition for intervening

4:45

for acute subdural hematomas.

4:48

These include thickness greater than 10 mm or midline

4:54

shift greater than 5 mm on CT, and this is generally

4:59

measured at the level of the septum

5:02

polysum as depicted previously.

5:05

All patients who have acute subdural hematomas should

5:07

undergo intracranial pressure monitoring with a

5:10

pressure bolt or a ventriculostomy catheter.

5:15

Another indication for surgery is a

5:17

patient who's doing very poorly.

5:18

So one who has a Glasgow Coma Scale less than nine,

5:22

indicating moderate to severe head trauma,

5:27

and one that may have a subdural hematoma that's

5:30

less than 10 mm or less than 5 shift.

5:33

So if it's not that large,

5:35

but the patient is in extremis from the

5:39

standpoint of their neurologic system,

5:41

then they will intervene surgically.

5:45

Here is a slide set of patients

5:49

who have subdural hematomas.

5:52

How do we know that this is a subdural hematoma?

5:55

This is a crescentic collection, not biconvex,

5:59

and therefore, it is a subdural hematoma.

6:02

You notice that the patient has midline shift,

6:06

which is probably around 1.5.

6:09

Therefore, this patient is going to the OR.

6:11

You notice that the thickness of this subdural hematoma,

6:14

I would estimate it probably around 2 CM.

6:17

That also is an indication for surgery.

6:20

This collection crosses where we would normally

6:23

expect to see the coronal suture,

6:26

and therefore it's more likely to represent a subdural

6:29

collection since epidural hematomas do not cross the bony

6:35

sutures where the bone is attached to the dura.

6:38

How about this patient on the right-hand side?

6:41

This patient on the right-hand side?

6:43

We see that the ventricles are shifted from right to left.

6:48

We see subarachnoid space on the left side,

6:52

but we have effacement of the subarachnoid

6:54

space on the right side.

6:56

The issue here is where is the cortical

6:59

margin of the brain tissue?

7:03

And you can actually see that the white matter

7:06

here goes out about this far and then stops.

7:10

And so the actual cortex of the brain

7:13

is right along this direction.

7:16

This patient has a collection known as an isodense

7:21

collection. An isodense subdural hematoma.

7:25

What do we mean by isodense?

7:27

It is the same density as gray matter.

7:30

So it is hard to detect is only by virtue of the

7:35

displacement of the normal gray matter and the gray-white

7:38

junction and the mass effect associated with the

7:41

hemorrhage that one can identify this

7:44

as an isodense subdural hematoma.

7:47

A word about isodense subdural hematoma.

7:51

Most of the time we say that isodense subdural hematomas

7:53

are subdural hematomas that are one to two weeks old

7:57

because they are not hyperdense of acute blood products.

8:03

And therefore, as the time goes on, density,

8:07

and this is time,

8:08

the density goes down over the course of time.

8:11

However, this assumes a normal hematocrit.

8:16

If you have a patient who is anemic,

8:21

their blood is not that dense as a person

8:26

who has a normal hematocrit.

8:28

So remember that the density of blood has to do with the

8:31

hemoglobin molecule, not the iron of it, but the globin.

8:35

But as the hemoglobin concentration increases,

8:40

density increases. So if you have a patient who is anemic,

8:44

for a variety of reasons,

8:46

their density of their blood products goes down.

8:51

This is particularly true, for example,

8:54

at Johns Hopkins University where I work,

8:56

because we have a large African American population.

8:59

That has sickle cell disease or sickle cell

9:02

anemia at a high rate.

9:04

And these patients,

9:05

because of their lower hematocrit,

9:07

generally have the propensity for acute isodense

9:12

subdural hematomas, not subacute ones.

9:17

And this may also be true of those patients who

9:19

are receiving chemotherapy, for example,

9:22

where they become anemic or any other cause of anemia.

9:27

So, to reiterate,

9:29

generally an isodense subdural hematoma refers to one that

9:35

is one to two weeks old on the way from initially being

9:40

hyperdense, like you see in the image to the left,

9:43

and then over the course of time,

9:45

becoming hypodense as the blood products resolve.

9:49

However,

9:50

there are instances where you can have an acute isodense

9:53

subdural hematoma related to the patient's hematocrit.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Vascular Imaging

Vascular

Trauma

Temporal bone

Neuroradiology

Head and Neck

Emergency

Drug related

CT

Brain

Bone & Soft Tissues

Acquired/Developmental