Bradford Ray, Choudhary Arabinda K, Dias Mark S
Department of Radiology, Penn State College of Medicine, Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Hershey, Pennsylvania 17033, USA.
J Neurosurg Pediatr. 2013 Aug;12(2):110-9. doi: 10.3171/2013.4.PEDS12596. Epub 2013 Jun 25.
The appearance and evolution of neuroimaging abnormalities following abusive head trauma (AHT) is important for establishing the time frame over which these injuries might have occurred. From a legal perspective this frames the timing of the abuse and therefore identifies and excludes potential perpetrators. A previous pilot study involving 33 infants with AHT helped to refine the timing of these injuries but was limited by its small sample size. In the present study, the authors analyzed a larger group of 210 cases involving infants with AHT to chronicle the first appearance and evolution of radiological (CT, MRI) abnormalities.
All children younger than 24 months admitted to the Penn State Hershey Medical Center with AHT over a 10-year period were identified from a medical record review; the time of injury was determined through an evaluation of the clinical records. All imaging studies were analyzed, and the appearance and evolution of abnormalities were chronicled on serial neuroimaging studies obtained in the days and weeks after injury.
One hundred five infants with specific injury dates and available imaging studies were identified; a subset of 43 children additionally had documented times of injury. In infants with homogeneously hyperdense subdural hematomas (SDHs) on initial CT scans, the first hypodense component appeared within the SDH between 0.3 and 16 days after injury, and the last hyperdense subdural component disappeared between 2 and 40 days after injury. In infants with mixed-density SDHs on initial scans, the last hyperdense component disappeared between 1 and 181 days. Parenchymal hypodensities appeared on CT scans performed as early as 1.2 hours, and all were visible within 27 hours after the injury. Rebleeding into SDHs was documented in 17 cases (16%) and was always asymptomatic. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain was performed in 49 infants. Among those with SDH, 5 patterns were observed. Patterns I and II reflected homogeneous SDH; Pattern I (T1 hyperintensity and T2/FLAIR hypointensity, "early subacute") more commonly appeared on scans performed earlier after injury compared with Pattern II (T1 hyperintensity and T2/FLAIR hyperintensity, "late subacute"), although there was considerable overlap. Patterns III and IV reflected heterogeneous SDH; Pattern III contained relatively equal mixtures having different intensities, whereas Pattern IV had fluid that was predominantly T1 hypointense and T2/FLAIR hyperintense. Again, Pattern III more commonly appeared on scans performed earlier after injury compared with Pattern IV, although there was significant overlap.
These data extend the preliminary data reported by Dias and colleagues and provide a framework upon which injuries in AHT can be timed as well as the limitations on such timing estimates.
虐待性头部创伤(AHT)后神经影像学异常的表现及演变对于确定这些损伤可能发生的时间范围很重要。从法律角度来看,这界定了虐待的时间,从而识别并排除潜在的肇事者。先前一项涉及33例AHT婴儿的初步研究有助于细化这些损伤的时间,但受样本量小的限制。在本研究中,作者分析了一组更大的210例AHT婴儿病例,以记录放射学(CT、MRI)异常的首次出现及演变情况。
通过病历回顾确定了10年间入住宾夕法尼亚州立大学赫尔希医学中心的所有24个月以下患有AHT的儿童;通过评估临床记录确定受伤时间。对所有影像学检查进行分析,并在受伤后数天和数周内获得的系列神经影像学检查中记录异常的表现及演变情况。
确定了105例有特定受伤日期且有可用影像学检查的婴儿;其中43例儿童还记录了受伤时间。在初始CT扫描显示均匀高密度硬膜下血肿(SDH)的婴儿中,SDH内第一个低密度成分在受伤后0.3至16天出现,最后一个高密度硬膜下成分在受伤后2至40天消失。在初始扫描显示混合密度SDH的婴儿中,最后一个高密度成分在1至181天消失。脑实质低密度最早在受伤后1.2小时的CT扫描上出现,且在受伤后27小时内均可见。17例(16%)记录到SDH再出血,且均无症状。对49例婴儿进行了脑部磁共振成像检查。在患有SDH的婴儿中,观察到5种模式。模式I和模式II反映均匀SDH;模式I(T1高信号和T2/FLAIR低信号,“早期亚急性”)与模式II(T1高信号和T2/FLAIR高信号,“晚期亚急性”)相比,更常见于受伤后早期进行的扫描中,尽管存在相当大的重叠。模式III和模式IV反映不均匀SDH;模式III包含强度不同的相对等量混合物,而模式IV的液体主要为T1低信号和T2/FLAIR高信号。同样,与模式IV相比,模式III更常见于受伤后早期进行的扫描中,尽管存在显著重叠。
这些数据扩展了迪亚斯及其同事报告的初步数据,并提供了一个框架,据此可以确定AHT损伤的时间以及此类时间估计的局限性。