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How to Read a Head CT

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B is for Blood. 1st decision: Is blood present? 2nd decision: If so, ... B is for Blood. Blood becomes hypodense at ... Blood becomes isodense at ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: How to Read a Head CT


1
How to Read a Head CT
  • (or How I learned to stop worrying and love
    computed tomography)

2
Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
  • EM Residency Program Director
  • Department of Emergency Medicine
  • Maine Medical Center
  • Portland, ME

Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
3
Head CT
  • Has assumed a critical role in the daily practice
    of Emergency Medicine for evaluating intracranial
    emergencies. (e.g. Trauma, Stroke, SAH, ICH).
  • Most practitioners have limited experience with
    interpretation.
  • In many situations, the Emergency Physician must
    initially interpret and act
  • on the CT without specialist assistance.

4
Head CT
  • Most EM training programs have no formalized
    training process to meet this need.
  • Many Emergency Physicians are uncomfortable
    interpreting CTs.
  • Studies have shown that EPs have a significant
    miss rate on cranial
  • CT interpretation.

5
Head CT
  • In medical school, we are taught a systematic
    technique to interpret ECGs (rate, rhythm, axis,
    etc.) so that all aspects are reviewed, and no
    findings are missed.

6
Head CT
  • The intent of this session is to introduce a
    similar systematic method of cranial CT
    interpretation, based on the mnemonic

7
Head CT
  • Blood Can Be Very Bad

8
Blood Can Be Very Bad
  • Blood
  • Cisterns
  • Brain
  • Ventricles
  • Bone

9
Blood Can Be Very Bad
  • Blood
  • Cisterns
  • Brain
  • Ventricles
  • Bone

10
Blood Can Be Very Bad
  • Blood
  • Cisterns
  • Brain
  • Ventricles
  • Bone

11
Blood Can Be Very Bad
  • Blood
  • Cisterns
  • Brain
  • Ventricles
  • Bone

12
Blood Can Be Very Bad
  • Blood
  • Cisterns
  • Brain
  • Ventricles
  • Bone

13
CT Scan Basics
  • Introduced in 1974 by Sir Jeffrey Hounsfield.
  • The original Siretom Circa 1974

14
CT Scan Basics
  • A CT image is a computer-generated picture based
    on multiple x-ray exposures taken around the
    periphery of the subject.
  • X-rays are passed through the subject, and a
    scanning device measures the transmitted
    radiation.
  • The denser the object, the more the beam is
    attenuated, and hence fewer x-rays make it to the
    sensor.

15
CT Scan Basics
  • The denser the object, the whiter it is on CT
  • Bone is most dense 1000 Hounsfield U.
  • Air is the least dense - 1000H Hounsfield U.

16
CT Scan Basics Windowing
Focuses the spectrum of gray-scale used on a
particular image.
17
2 Sheet Head CT
18
Posterior Fossa
  • Brainstem
  • Cerebellum
  • Skull Base
  • Clinoids
  • Petrosal bone
  • Sphenoid bone
  • Sella turcica
  • Sinuses

19
CT Scan
20
CT Scan
21
Sagittal View
22
Cisterns
23
CT Scan
24
Brainstem Lateral View
25
2nd Key Level Sagittal View
2nd Key Level
26
Cisterns at Cerebral Peduncles Level
27
CT Scan
28
Suprasellar Cistern
29
CT Scan
30
3rd Key Level Sagittal View
31
Cisterns at High Mid-Brain Level
32
CT Scan
33
Ventricles
34
CSF Production
  • Produced in choroid plexus in the lateral
    ventricles ? Foramen of Monroe ? IIIrd Ventricle
    ? Acqueduct of Sylvius ? IVth Ventricle ?
    Lushka/Magendie
  • 0.5-1 cc/min
  • Adult CSF volume is approx. 150 ccs.
  • Adult CSF production is approx. 500-700 ccs per
    day.

35
CT Scan
36
CT Scans
Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
36
37
Trauma Pictures
38
PATHOLOGY
39
B is for Blood
  • 1st decision Is blood present?
  • 2nd decision If so, where is it?
  • 3rd decision If so, what effect is it having?

40
B is for Blood
  • Acute blood is bright white on CT (once it clots).
  • Blood becomes isodense at approximately 1 week.
  • Blood becomes hypodense at approximately 2 weeks.

41
B is for Blood
  • Acute blood is bright white on CT (once it clots).
  • Blood becomes isodense at approximately 1 week.
  • Blood becomes hypodense at approximately 2 weeks.

42
B is for Blood
  • Acute blood is bright white on CT (once it clots).
  • Blood becomes isodense at approximately 1 week.
  • Blood becomes hypodense at approximately 2 weeks.

43
Epidural Hematoma
  • Lens shaped
  • Does not cross sutures
  • Classically described with injury to middle
    meningeal artery
  • Low mortality if treated prior to unconsciousness
  • (

44
CT Scan
45
CT Scans
46
Subdural Hematoma
  • Typically falx or sickle-shaped.
  • Crosses sutures, but does not cross midline.
  • Acute subdural is a marker for severe head
    injury. (Mortality approaches 80)
  • Chronic subdural usually slow venous bleed and
    well tolerated.

47
CT Scan
Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
47
48
CT Scan
Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
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49
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
50
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
  • Blood in the cisterns/cortical gyral surface
  • Aneurysms responsible for 75-80 of SAH
  • AVMs responsible for 4-5
  • Vasculitis accounts for small proportion (
  • No cause is found in 10-15
  • 20 will have associated acute hydrocephalus

51
CT Scan Sensitivity for SAH
  • 98-99 at 0-12 hours
  • 90-95 at 24 hours
  • 80 at 3 days
  • 50 at 1 week
  • 30 at 2 weeks
  • Depends on generation of scanner and who is
    reading scan.

52
CT Scan
Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
52
53
CT Scan
Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
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54
Intraventricular/Intraparenchymal Hemorrhage
54
Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
55
CT Scan
Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
55
56
C is for CISTERNS
(Blood Can Be Very Bad)
  • 4 key cisterns
  • Circummesencephalic
  • Suprasellar
  • Quadrigeminal
  • Sylvian

57
Cisterns
  • 2 Key questions to answer regarding cisterns
  • Is there blood?
  • Are the cisterns open?

58
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B is for BRAIN
(Blood Can Be Very Bad)
Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
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Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
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Tumor
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Atrophy
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65
Abscess
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Hemorrhagic Contusion
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(No Transcript)
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Mass Effect
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Stroke
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Intracranial Air
74
Intracranial Air
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Intracranial Air
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V is for VENTRICLES
(Blood Can Be Very Bad)
77
Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
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Ex-Vacuo Phenomenon
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Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
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BONE
Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
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Three Stooges
88
Blood Can Be Very Bad
If no blood is seen, all cisterns are present and
open, the brain is symmetric with normal
gray-white differentiation, the ventricles are
symmetric without dilation, and there is no
fracture, then there is no emergent diagnosis
from the CT scan.
89
RIP
90
Questions
www.ferne.orgferne_at_ferne.orgAndrew D. Perron,
MD, FACEP perroa_at_mmc.org(207) 662-7015
Andrew D. Perron, MD, FACEP
ferne_acep_2005_spring_perron_ich_bcbvb.ppt 8/13/2
009 1144 AM
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