• Der Radiologe · Nov 1994

    [Magnetic resonance tomography in epidural and subdural spinal hematoma].

    • S Felber, J Langmaier, W Judmaier, A Dessl, M Ortler, G Birbamer, and U Piepgras.
    • Klinik für Neurologie, Universitätskliniken Innsbruck, Osterreich.
    • Radiologe. 1994 Nov 1;34(11):656-61.

    AbstractEpidural and subdural spinal hematomas were previously diagnosed by myelography and computed tomography (CT). Recent reports indicate that noninvasive detection is possible with magnetic resonance imaging. We report on nine patients who were investigated by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) prior to surgery for epidural and subdural spinal hematoma. The MR examinations were performed on 1.5-T and 1-T units. We used surface coils and employed T1-, PD- and T2-weighted spin echo sequences and a T2*-weighted gradient echo sequence. CT was available in four patients and myelography in two patients. Surgical correlation was available in all patients. The hematomas were located in the cervical spine (n = 2), thoracic spine (n = 6) and lumbar spine (n = 2). They were epidural in five patients and subdural in four. Blinded reading correctly identified all five epidural hematomas and three of the subdural hematomas; one subdural hematoma was misjudged as epidural. Peracute hematomas (< 24 h) in three patients appeared isointense or slightly hyperintense on T1-weighted images and had mixed signal intensity on T2- and T2*-weighted images. Acute hematomas (1-3 days) in four patients were also isointense on T1-weighted images but were more hypointense on T2- and T2*-weighted images. Chronic hematomas in two patients (7 days and 14 days) were hyperintense on all sequences. Differentiation between epi- and subdural hematomas required transverse T2*-weighted gradient echo sequences. Our results underline that MRI at 1 and 1.5 T is capable of identifying epidural and subdural spinal hematoma in the acute and peracute stage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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