From the Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging (K.K.D., J.F.T., J.N., A.G., B.R., A.U., E.Y.), University of California, San Francisco and Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, San Francisco, California.
From the Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging (K.K.D., J.F.T., J.N., A.G., B.R., A.U., E.Y.), University of California, San Francisco and Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, San Francisco, California
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2018 Apr;39(4):654-657. doi: 10.3174/ajnr.A5557. Epub 2018 Mar 1.
In blunt traumatic brain injury with isolated falcotentorial subdural hematoma not amenable to neurosurgical intervention, the routinely performed, nonvalidated practice of serial head CT scans frequently necessitates increased hospital resources and exposure to ionizing radiation. The study goal was to evaluate clinical and imaging features of isolated falcotentorial subdural hematoma at presentation and short-term follow-up.
We performed a retrospective analysis of patients presenting to a level 1 trauma center from January 2013 to March 2015 undergoing initial and short-term follow-up CT with initial findings positive for isolated subdural hematoma along the falx and/or tentorium. Patients with penetrating trauma, other sites of intracranial hemorrhage, or depressed skull fractures were excluded. Patient sex, age, Glasgow Coma Scale score, and anticoagulation history were obtained through review of the electronic medical records.
Eighty patients met the inclusion criteria (53 males; 27 females; median age, 61 years). Of subdural hematomas, 57.1% were falcine, 33.8% were tentorial, and 9.1% were mixed. The mean initial Glasgow Coma Scale score was 14.2 (range, 6-15). Isolated falcotentorial subdural hematomas were small (mean, 2.8 mm; range, 1-8 mm) without mass effect and significant change on follow-up CT (mean, 2.7 mm; range, 0-8 mm; = .06), with an average follow-up time of 10.3 hours (range, 3.9-192 hours). All repeat CTs demonstrated no change or decreased size of the initial subdural hematoma. No new intracranial hemorrhages were seen on follow-up CT.
Isolated falcotentorial subdural hematomas in blunt traumatic brain injury average 2.8 mm in thickness and do not increase in size on short-term follow-up CT. Present data suggest that repeat CT in patients with mild traumatic brain injury with isolated falcotentorial subdural hematoma may not be necessary.
在非手术治疗的钝性创伤性脑损伤合并孤立性镰状窦和/或天幕下硬膜下血肿时,常规进行的、未经证实的连续头部 CT 扫描经常需要增加医院资源并暴露于电离辐射。本研究的目的是评估孤立性镰状窦和/或天幕下硬膜下血肿的临床表现和影像学特征。
我们对 2013 年 1 月至 2015 年 3 月期间在一级创伤中心就诊的患者进行了回顾性分析,这些患者在初始和短期随访时均进行了初始 CT 和短期随访 CT,结果显示存在镰状窦和/或天幕处的孤立性硬膜下血肿。排除穿透性创伤、其他部位颅内出血或凹陷性颅骨骨折的患者。通过电子病历回顾获取患者的性别、年龄、格拉斯哥昏迷评分和抗凝治疗史。
符合纳入标准的患者共 80 例(53 例男性;27 例女性;中位年龄 61 岁)。硬膜下血肿中,镰状窦 57.1%,天幕 33.8%,混合性 9.1%。初始格拉斯哥昏迷评分平均为 14.2(范围 6-15)。孤立性镰状窦和天幕下硬膜下血肿较小(平均 2.8mm;范围 1-8mm),无占位效应,短期随访 CT 无明显变化(平均 2.7mm;范围 0-8mm; =.06),平均随访时间为 10.3 小时(范围 3.9-192 小时)。所有复查 CT 均显示初始硬膜下血肿无变化或缩小。在随访 CT 上未发现新的颅内出血。
在钝性创伤性脑损伤中,孤立性镰状窦和天幕下硬膜下血肿的平均厚度为 2.8mm,在短期随访 CT 上不会增大。目前的数据表明,对于轻度创伤性脑损伤合并孤立性镰状窦和天幕下硬膜下血肿的患者,重复 CT 可能不是必需的。