Firsching R, Woischneck D, Diedrich M, Klein S, Rückert A, Wittig H, Döhring W
Klinik für Neurochirurgie, Otto von Guericke Universität Magdeburg, Germany.
J Neurosurg. 1998 Nov;89(5):707-12. doi: 10.3171/jns.1998.89.5.0707.
The availability of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging data obtained in comatose patients after head injury is scarce, because MR imaging is somewhat cumbersome to perform in patients requiring ventilation and because, in the first hours after injury, its relevance is clearly inferior to computerized tomography (CT) scanning. The authors assessed the value of MR imaging in the early postinjury period.
In this prospective study MR imaging was performed in 61 consecutive patients within 7 days after they suffered a severe head injury. An initial CT scan had already been obtained. To understand the clinical significance of the lesions whose morphological appearance was identified with MR imaging, brainstem function was assessed by registration of somatosensory and auditory evoked potentials. Brainstem lesions were visualized in 39 patients (64%). Bilateral pontine lesions proved to be 100% fatal and nonbrainstem lesions carried a mortality rate of 9%. In singular cases circumstances allowed for a clear clinical distinction between primary and secondary brainstem lesions. On MR imaging all lesions were hyper- and hypointense after intervals longer than 2 days. Within shorter intervals (< 2 days) after the injury, primary lesions appeared isointense on MR imaging. In one secondary brainstem lesion there were no traces of blood.
Because mean intracranial pressure (ICP) levels in patients without brainstem lesions were similar to those in patients with brainstem lesions, the authors conclude that it was not mainly increased ICP that accounted for the high mortality rates in patients with brainstem lesions. The authors also conclude that brainstem lesions are more frequently found in severe head injury than previously reported in studies based on neuropathological or CT scanning data. Early MR imaging after head injury has a higher predictive value than CT scanning.
头部受伤后昏迷患者的磁共振(MR)成像数据较少,这是因为对需要通气的患者进行MR成像操作有些麻烦,而且在受伤后的最初几个小时内,其相关性明显低于计算机断层扫描(CT)。作者评估了MR成像在受伤后早期的价值。
在这项前瞻性研究中,对61例连续发生严重头部受伤且在7天内的患者进行了MR成像检查。已经进行了初始CT扫描。为了解通过MR成像识别出形态学表现的病变的临床意义,通过记录体感和听觉诱发电位来评估脑干功能。39例患者(64%)可见脑干病变。双侧脑桥病变被证明100%致命,非脑干病变的死亡率为9%。在个别情况下,可以在临床上明确区分原发性和继发性脑干病变。在MR成像上,所有病变在超过2天后均表现为高信号和低信号。在受伤后较短时间间隔(<2天)内,原发性病变在MR成像上表现为等信号。在一处继发性脑干病变中没有出血迹象。
由于无脑干病变患者的平均颅内压(ICP)水平与有脑干病变患者的相似,作者得出结论,脑干病变患者的高死亡率并非主要由ICP升高所致。作者还得出结论,与之前基于神经病理学或CT扫描数据的研究所报道的相比,严重头部受伤患者中脑干病变更为常见。头部受伤后早期的MR成像比CT扫描具有更高的预测价值。