Imaging & Diagnostics

Head Trauma And Other Intra-Cranial Pathology Imaging Approaches

Share

Head Trauma: Skull Fractures

  • SKULL FX: COMMON IN THE SETTINGS OF HEAD INJURIES. SKULL FX OFTEN POINT TO OTHER COMPLICATING FACTORS: INTRA-CRANIALHEMORRHAGING, CLOSED TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY AND OTHER SERIOUS COMPLICATIONS
  • SKULL X-RAYS ARE VIRTUALLY OBSOLETE IN EVALUATING HEAD INJURY. CT SCANNING W/O CONTRAST IS THE MOST IMPORTANT INITIAL STEP IN EVALUATION OF ACUTE HEAD TRAUMA. MRI HASA POOR ABILITY TO REVEAL SKULL FRACTURES, AND NOT TYPICALLY USED FOR AN INITIAL DX OF ACUTE HEAD TRAUMA.
  • SKULL FX ARE IDENTIFIED AS FXS OF SKULL VAULT, SKULL BASE AND FACIAL SKELETON EACH ASSOCIATED WITH SPECIFIC FEATURES AND HELP TO PREDICT COMPLICATIONS.
  • LINEAR SKULL FX: SKULL VAULT. M/C FX. CT SCANNING IS THE KEY TO EVALUATE ARTERIALEXTRADURAL HEMORRHAGING
  • X-RAY DDX: SUTURES VS. LINEAR SKULL FX. FX IS THINNER, “BLACKER” I.E. MORE LUCENT, CROSSESSUTURES, AND VASCULAR GROOVES, LACKSSERRATIONS
  • RX: IF NO INTRACRANIAL BLEEDS THAT NO TREATMENT. NEUROSURGICAL CARE IF BLEEDSDETECTED BY CT SCANNING
  • DEPRESSED SKULL FX: 75% IN THE VAULT. CAN BE DEADLY. CONSIDERED AN OPEN FX. MOST CASES NEED NEUROSURGICALEXPLORATION ESPECIALLY IFFRAGMENTS DEPRESSED >1-CM.COMPLICATIONS: VASCULAR INJURY/HEMATOMAS, PNEUMOCEPHALUS, MENINGITIS, TBI, CSF LEAK, BRAIN HERNIATION ETC.
  • IMAGING: CT SCANNING W/O CONTRAST
  • BASILAR SKULL FX: CAN BE DEADLY. OFTEN ALONG OTHER MAJOR HEAD TRAUMA OF THE VAULT AND FACIALSKELETON, OFTEN WITH TBI AND MAJORINTRACRANIAL HEMORRHAGING. OFTEN OCCUR AS “HEADBAND” EFFECT OF IMPACT AND MECHANICAL TENSIONTHROUGH THE OCCIPUT AND TEMPORAL BONES THROUGH SPHENOID AND OTHER BASE OF SKULL BONES. CLINICALLY: RACCOON EYES, BATTEL SIGN, CSFRHINO/OTORRHEA.

Facial Fractures

  • NASAL BONES FX: 45% OF ALLFACEFXM/C IMPACT IS LATERAL(FIST BLOW ETC.) IF UNDISPLACEDNO TREATMENT, IF DISPLACED MAY COMPLICATE AIR FLOW AND RESPIRATORY PASSAGE, MAY BE ASSOCIATED WITH OTHER FACIAL/SKULL INJURY. X-RAYS 80%SENSITIVE, FOLLOWED BY CT INCOMPLEX INJURIES.
  • ORBITAL BLOW OUT FX: COMMONORBITAL INJURY D/T IMPACT ON THE GLOBE AND/OR ORBITAL BONE. FX OF ORBITAL FLOOR INTOMAXILLARY SINUS VS. MEDIAL WALL INTO ETHMOID SINUS. COMPLICATIONS: ENTRAPPEDINFERIOR RECTUS M, PROLAPSEORBITAL FAT, AND SOFT TISSUES, HEMORRHAGING AND OPTIC NERVE DAMAGE. RX: CONCERNS OF GLOBE INJURY ARE IMPORTANT, GENERALLY TREATEDCONSERVATIVELY IF NO COMPLICATIONS PRESENT
  • TRIPOD FX: 2ND M/C FACIAL FX#AFTER NASAL (40% OF MIDFACEFX) 3-POINT FX-ZYGOMATICARCH, ORBITAL PROCESS OF ZYGOMATIC BONE & SIDE OF MAXILLARY SINUS WALL, MAXILLARY PROCESS OF ZYGOMATIC BONE.COMPLICATED BY NERVE INJURY, TEMPORALIS M DAMAGE ETC. CT SCANNING IS MORE INFORMATIVE THAT X-RAYS (WATER’S VIEW).
  • LEFORT FX: SERIOUS FX ALWAYS INVOLVES PTERYGOID PLATES, POTENTIALLY SEPARATINGMIDFACE AND ALVEOLAR PROCESS WITH TEETH FROM THE SKULL. CONCERNS: AIRWAYS, HEMOSTASIS, NERVE INJURIES. CT SCANNING IS REQUIRED. POTENTIAL RISK OF BASILAR SKULL FX
  • PING-PONG FX: EXCLUSIVELY IN INFANTS. AN INCOMPLETE FX D/T FOCALDEPRESSION: FORCEPS DELIVERY, DIFFICULT LABOUR ETC. FOCALTRABECULAR MICROFRACTURIINGLEAVING DEPRESSION RESEMBLING APING-PONG. DX IS MAINLY CLINICALSEEN AS FOCAL DEFECT “DEPRESSION” IN THE SKULL. TYPICALLYNEUROLOGICALLY INTACT. CT MAY HELP IF BRAIN INJURY IS SUSPECTED. RX: OBSERVATIONAL VS. SURGICAL IN COMPLICATED INJURIES. SPONTANEOUSREMODELING HAS BEEN REPORTED
  • LEPTOMENINGEAL CYST (GROWING SKULL FX)- ARE AN ENLARGING SKULL FRACTURE THAT DEVELOPS ADJACENT TO POSTTRAUMATIC ENCEPHALOMALACIA
  • IT IS NOT A CYST, BUT AN EXTENSION OF THEENCEPHALOMALACIA THAT SEEN A FEW MONTHS POST-TRAUMA WITH PREVIOUS SKULL FX FOLLOWEDBY HERNIATION OF THE MENINGES AND ADJACENTBRAIN WITH PULSATIONS OF THE CSF. CT IS BEST ATDX THIS PATHOLOGY. INDICATES: GROWING FX AND ADJACENT ENCEPHALOMALACIA AS FOCALHYPOATTENUATING LESION.
  • CLINICALLY: PALPABLE CALVARIAL ENLARGEMENT, PAIN, NEUROLOGICAL SIGNS/SEIZURES. RX: NEUROSURGICAL CONSULT IS REQUIRED
  • DDX: INFILTRATING CELLS/METS/OTHER NEOPLASMSINTO SUTURES, EG, INFECTION ETC.
  • MANDIBULAR FXS: COMMON. POTENTIALLYCONSIDERED AN OPEN FX D/T INTRA-ORALEXTENSION. 40% FOCAL BREAK DESPITEMANDIBLE BEING A RING. DIRECT IMPACT(ASSAULT) M/C MECHANISM
  • PATHOLOGICAL FX D/T BONE NEOPLASMS, INFECTION ETC. IATROGENIC DURING ORAL SURGERY (TOOTH EXTRACTION)
  • IMAGING: MANDIBLE X-RAYS, PANOREX, CT SCANNING ESP. IN CASES OF ASSOCIATEDFACE/HEAD TRAUMA
  • COMPLICATIONS: AIRWAY OBSTRUCTION, HEMOSTASIS IS A MAJOR CONSIDERATION, DAMAGE TO MANDIBULAR N, OSTEOMYELITIS/CELLULITIS AND POTENTIAL SPREAD THROUGH FLOOR OF THE MOUTH (LUDWIGANGINA) AND NECK FASCIAL SOFT TISSUES INTOMEDIASTINUM. CANNOT BE NEGLECTED D/T HIGH MORTALITY RATES.
  • RX: CONSERVATIVE VS. OPERATIVE

Acute Intracranial Hemorrhage

  • EPI AKA EXTRA DURAL: (EDH) TRAUMATIC RAPTURE OF MENINGEAL ARTERIES (MMA CLASSIC) WITH RAPIDLY FORMING HEMATOMA BETWEEN THE INNER SKULL AND OUTER DURA. CT SCANNING IS THE KEY TO DX: PRESENTS AS “LENTIFORM” I.E. BICONVEX COLLECTION OF ACUTE (HYPERDENSE) BLOOD THAT DOES NOT CROSSSUTURES AND HELPS WITH DDX OF A SUBDURAL HEMATOMA. CLINICALLY: HA, LUCID EPISODE INITIALLY AND DETERIORATING IN A FEW HOURS.COMPLICATIONS: BRAIN HERNIATION, CN PALSY. O/A GOOD PROGNOSIS IF QUICKLY EVACUATED.
  • SUBDURAL HEMATOMA (SDH): RAPTURE OF BRIDGINGVEINS BETWEEN INNER DURA AND THE ARACHNOID.SLOW BUT PROGRESSIVE BLEED. MAY PARTICULARLYAFFECT THE VERY YOUNG AND ELDERLY AND IN ALL AGES (MVA, FALLS ETC.) MAY DEVELOP IN “SHAKEN BABY SYNDROME”. DX MAY BE DELAYED AND WORSEN THE PROGNOSIS WITH HIGH FATALITIES. IN ELDERLY HEAD TRAUMA MAY BE MINOR OR NOT RECALLED. EARLYIMAGING WITH CT IS CRUCIAL. PRESENTS AS CRESCENTSHAPEDCOLLECTION THAT CAN CROSS SUTURES BUT STOPPED AT DURAL REFLECTIONS. DIFFERENTATTENUATION ON CT D/T DIFFERENT STAGES OF BLOODDECOMPOSITION: ACUTE, SUBACUTE, AND CHRONIC.MAY FORM A CHRONIC COLLECTION-CYSTICHYGROMA. CLINICALLY: VARIABLE PRESENTATION, 45-60% PRESENT WITH SEVERELY DEPRESSED CNS STATUS, PUPILLARY INEQUALITY. OFTEN WITH INITIAL BRAIN CONTUSION, THEN A LUCID EPISODE BEFORE SEVERELYDETERIORATING. IN 30% CASES OF FATAL BRAIN INJURY PATIENTS HAD SDH. RX: URGENT NEUROSURGICAL.
  • SUBARACHNOID HEMORRHAGE (SAH): BLOOD IN THE SUB-ARACHNOID SPACE AS THE RESULT OF TRAUMATIC OR NON-TRAUMATIC ETIOLOGY: BERRY ANEURYSMS AROUND CIRCLE OF WILLIS.SAH 3% OF STROKES, 5% OF FETAL STROKES.CLINICALLY: PRESENTS AS A “THUNDERCLAP HEADACHE” DESCRIBED AS A “WORST HA INLIFE”. PT COLLAPSES MAY OR MAY NOT REGAIN CONSCIOUSNESS. PATHOGY: DIFFUSE BLOOD INSA SPACE 1)SUPRASELLAR CISTERN WITH DIFFUSE PERIPHERAL EXTENSION, 2) PERIMESENCEPHALIC, 3) BASAL CISTERNS. BLOOD LEAKED INTO SA SPACE UNDERARTERIAL PRESSURE INDUCES GLOBAL INCREASE IN INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE, ACUTE GLOBAL ISCHEMIA WORSENED BY VASOSPASM AND OTHER CHANGES.
  • DX: IMAGING: URGENT CT SCANNING W/O CONTRAST, CT ANGIOGRAPHY MAY HELP TO RULE OUT 99% OF SAH. LUMBAR PUNCTUREMAY HELP IN DELAYED PRESENTATION. AFTER INITIAL DX: MR ANGIOGRAPHY HELPS TO FIND THE CAUSE AND OTHER IMPORTANT FEATURES
  • IMAGING FEATURES: ACUTE BLOOD IS HYPERDENSE ON CT. FOUND IN DIFFERENTCYSTERNS: PERIMESENCEPHALIC, SUPRASELLA, BASAL, VENTRICLES,
  • RX: INTRAVENOUS ANTIHYPERTENSIVE MEDS, OSMOTIC AGENTS (MANNITOL) TO DECREASEICP. NEUROSURGICAL CLIPPING AND OTHER APPROACHES.

CNS Neoplasms: Benign vs. Malignant

  • BRAIN TUMORS REPRESENT 2% OF ALL CANCERS. ONE THIRD ARE MALIGNANT, OF WHICH METASTATIC BRAIN LESIONS ARE THE MOST COMMON
  • CLINICALLY PRESENT WITH LOCAL CNS ABNORMALITIES, INCREASED ICP, INTRACEREBRAL BLEEDING ETC. FAMILIALSYNDROMES: VON-HIPPEL-LANDAU, TUBEROUS SCLEROSIS, TURCOT SYNDROME, NF1 & NF2 INCREASE THE RISK. IN CHILDREN: M/C ASTROCYTOMAS, EPENDYMOMAS, PNETNEOPLASMS (E.G. MEDULLOBLASTOMA) ETC. DX: BASED ON WHO CLASSIFICATION.
  • ADULTS: M/C BENIGN NEOPLASM: MENINGIOMA. M/C PRIMARY: GLIOBLASTOMA MULTIFORME (GBM)METSESPECIALLY FROM LUNG, MELANOMA, AND BREAST.OTHERS: CNS LYMPHOMA
  • IMAGING IS CRUCIAL: INITIAL SYMPTOMS MAY PRESENT AS SEIZURE, ICP SIGNS HA. EVALUATED BY CT AND MRI WITH IV GADOLINIUM.
  • IMAGING DETERMINES: INTRA-AXIAL VS. EXTRA-AXIALNEOPLASMS. METS FROM PRIMARY BRAIN NEOPLASMS MAYO CCUR VIA CSF AND LOCAL VESSELS INVASION
  • NOTE AXIAL CT SLICE OF MENINGIOMA WITH AVIDCONTRAST ENHANCEMENT.
  • AXIAL MRI ON FLAIR PULSE SEQUENCE REVEALED EXTENSIVE NEOPLASM AND MARKED CYTOTOXIC EDEMA OF THE BRAIN PARENCHYMA CHARACTERISTIC OF GRADE IV GLIOMA (GBM) WITH VERY POOR PROGNOSIS. ABOVE FAR RIGHT IMAGE: AXIAL MRI FLAIR: BRAIN METASTASIS FROM BREAST CANCER. MELANOMA IS COMMONLY METASTASIZESTO THE BRAIN (SEE PATH SPECIMEN) MRI CAN BE DIAGNOSTIC D/T HIGH SIGNAL ON T1 AND CONTRAST ENHANCEMENT.
  • RX: NEUROSURGICAL, RADIATION, CHEMOTHERAPY, IMMUNOTHERAPY TECHNIQUES ARE EMERGING

Inflammatory CNS Pathology

CNS Infections

  • BACTERIAL
  • MYCOBACTERIAL
  • FUNGAL
  • VIRAL
  • PARASITIC
Post Disclaimer

Professional Scope of Practice *

The information herein on "Head Trauma And Other Intra-Cranial Pathology Imaging Approaches" is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional or licensed physician and is not medical advice. We encourage you to make healthcare decisions based on your research and partnership with a qualified healthcare professional.

Blog Information & Scope Discussions

Our information scope is limited to Chiropractic, musculoskeletal, physical medicines, wellness, contributing etiological viscerosomatic disturbances within clinical presentations, associated somatovisceral reflex clinical dynamics, subluxation complexes, sensitive health issues, and/or functional medicine articles, topics, and discussions.

We provide and present clinical collaboration with specialists from various disciplines. Each specialist is governed by their professional scope of practice and their jurisdiction of licensure. We use functional health & wellness protocols to treat and support care for the injuries or disorders of the musculoskeletal system.

Our videos, posts, topics, subjects, and insights cover clinical matters, issues, and topics that relate to and directly or indirectly support our clinical scope of practice.*

Our office has reasonably attempted to provide supportive citations and has identified the relevant research study or studies supporting our posts. We provide copies of supporting research studies available to regulatory boards and the public upon request.

We understand that we cover matters that require an additional explanation of how it may assist in a particular care plan or treatment protocol; therefore, to further discuss the subject matter above, please feel free to ask Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, or contact us at 915-850-0900.

We are here to help you and your family.

Blessings

Dr. Alex Jimenez DC, MSACP, RN*, CCST, IFMCP*, CIFM*, ATN*

email: coach@elpasofunctionalmedicine.com

Licensed as a Doctor of Chiropractic (DC) in Texas & New Mexico*
Texas DC License # TX5807, New Mexico DC License # NM-DC2182

Licensed as a Registered Nurse (RN*) in Florida
Florida License RN License # RN9617241 (Control No. 3558029)
License Compact Status: Multi-State License: Authorized to Practice in 40 States*
Presently Matriculated: ICHS: MSN* FNP (Family Nurse Practitioner Program)

Dr. Alex Jimenez DC, MSACP, RN* CIFM*, IFMCP*, ATN*, CCST
My Digital Business Card

Published by

Recent Posts

Sleep with a Pillow Between the Legs for Back Pain Relief

For individuals with back pain, can sleeping with a pillow between or under their knees… Read More

March 27, 2024

Harness the Power of Peppermint: Medicinal Benefits Explored

For individuals dealing with digestive issues or bowel disorders, can adding peppermint to a nutrition… Read More

March 26, 2024

Relieving Eczema Symptoms: The Role of Acupuncture

For individuals dealing with eczema, can incorporating acupuncture into a treatment plan help manage and… Read More

March 25, 2024

Understanding Whiplash: Signs, Symptoms, and Treatment

Those experiencing neck pain, stiffness, headache, shoulder and back pain may suffer from a whiplash… Read More

March 22, 2024

Nopal: A Superfood for Enhanced Nutrition and Wellness

Can incorporating nopal or prickly pear cactus into one's diet help individuals trying to lower… Read More

March 21, 2024

Improve Breathing Techniques for Optimal Exercise Performance

Can improving breathing patterns help further fitness and optimize overall health for individuals who walk… Read More

March 21, 2024