Campodonico F, Brienza G, Cotroneo E, Fabbrini G
Istituto di Radiologia, Università La Sapienza, Roma.
Radiol Med. 1989 Jan-Feb;77(1-2):65-9.
Fifty-two patients were studied with high-field magnetic resonance imaging (1.5T), with T1- and T2-weighted spin-echo pulse sequences. The study was aimed at assessing the efficacy of MR imaging in the evaluation of intracranial hematomas. Characteristic intensity patterns were observed in the evolution of the hematomas, due to the physicochemical changes in hemoglobin. No acute hematomas were observed. In 35 sub-acute hematomas, peripheral hyperintensity could be observed on T1- and T2-weighted pulse sequences. This hyperintensity eventually fills in the hematoma in the chronic stage. In 17 chronic hematomas, a peripheral hypointense ring due to hemosiderin deposits was seen on T1- and T2-weighted scans. The authors conclude that high-field MR imaging is a very sensible diagnostic method in the evaluation of sub-acute and chronic hematomas.