1College of Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina; and.
Departments of2Neurosurgery and.
J Neurosurg Pediatr. 2021 Feb 5;27(4):475-481. doi: 10.3171/2020.8.PEDS20496. Print 2021 Apr 1.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a prevalent pediatric pathology in the modern emergency department. Computed tomography (CT) is utilized for detection of TBI and can result in cumulatively high radiation exposure. Recently, a fast brain magnetic resonance imaging (fbMRI) protocol has been employed for rapid imaging of hydrocephalus in pediatric patients. The authors investigate the utility of a modified trauma-focused fbMRI (t-fbMRI) protocol as an alternative to surveillance CT in the setting of acute TBI in pediatric patients, thus reducing radiation exposure while improving diagnostic yield.
A retrospective review was performed at the authors' institution for all pediatric patients who had undergone t-fbMRI within 72 hours of an initial CT scan, using a 1.5- or 3-T MR scanner for trauma indications. Forty patients met the study inclusion criteria. The authors performed a comparison of findings on the reads of CT and fbMRI, and a board-certified neuroradiologist conducted an independent review of both modalities.
T-fbMRI outperformed CT in specificity, sensitivity, and negative predictive value for all injury pathologies measured, except for skull fractures. T-fbMRI demonstrated a sensitivity of 100% in the detection of extraaxial bleed, intraventricular hemorrhage, and subarachnoid hemorrhage and had a sensitivity of 78% or greater for epidural hematoma, subdural hematoma, and intraparenchymal hemorrhage. T-fbMRI yielded a specificity of 100% for all types of intracranial hemorrhages, with a corresponding negative predictive value that exceeded that for CT.
In pediatric populations, the t-fbMRI protocol provides a valid alternative to CT in the surveillance of TBI and intracranial hemorrhage. Although not as sensitive in the detection of isolated skull fractures, t-fbMRI can be used to monitor pathologies implicated in TBI patients while minimizing radiation exposure from traditional surveillance imaging.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)是现代急诊科中一种常见的儿科疾病。计算机断层扫描(CT)用于检测 TBI,可能会导致累积的高辐射暴露。最近,快速脑磁共振成像(fbMRI)方案已用于儿科患者脑积水的快速成像。作者研究了一种改良的创伤型聚焦 fbMRI(t-fbMRI)方案作为儿科急性 TBI 患者替代常规 CT 监测的效用,从而减少辐射暴露,同时提高诊断效果。
作者所在机构对所有在初始 CT 扫描后 72 小时内进行 t-fbMRI 的儿科患者进行了回顾性研究,使用 1.5 或 3T 磁共振扫描仪进行创伤检查。40 名患者符合研究纳入标准。作者比较了 CT 和 fbMRI 读片的结果,并由一名经过董事会认证的神经放射科医生对两种模式进行了独立评估。
除了颅骨骨折外,t-fbMRI 在所有测量的损伤病理中,在特异性、敏感性和阴性预测值方面均优于 CT。t-fbMRI 对硬膜外血肿、硬膜下血肿和脑实质血肿的检测敏感性为 78%或更高,对轴外出血、脑室内出血和蛛网膜下腔出血的检测敏感性为 100%。t-fbMRI 对所有类型的颅内出血的特异性为 100%,相应的阴性预测值超过 CT。
在儿科人群中,t-fbMRI 方案是 TBI 和颅内出血监测的 CT 替代方案。虽然在检测孤立性颅骨骨折方面不如 CT 敏感,但 t-fbMRI 可用于监测 TBI 患者的病理变化,同时最大限度地减少传统监测成像的辐射暴露。