Corpus callosum is one of the common sites of brain lesion, whose involvement is an indicator of a more severe prognosis, produced by traumatic shearing stresses resulting in diffuse axonal injury (DAI). Computed tomography (CT) in acute phase is considered to have a limited role for the detection of non-hemorrhagic or petechial hemorrhagic DAI lesions. New generation multidetector CT scanners allow faster acquis ition of thinner-slice images and post-processing reformations. Three patients with severe closed head trauma underwent CT examinations using a multidetector scanner, a few hours and the day after injury. The review of original images with narrow window width and integration with reconstruction of thinner slices from raw-data and post-processing multiplanar reformations (MPR) helped to detect the onset of hypodense or predominantly hypodense areas of corpus callosum, not present at admission and afterwards confirmed by MRI.

Traumatic lesions of corpus callosum: early multidetector CT findings / D. Gadda, L. Carmignani, L. Vannucchi, A. Bindi. - In: NEURORADIOLOGY. - ISSN 0028-3940. - 46:10(2004 Oct), pp. 812-816.

Traumatic lesions of corpus callosum: early multidetector CT findings

L. Carmignani
Secondo
;
2004

Abstract

Corpus callosum is one of the common sites of brain lesion, whose involvement is an indicator of a more severe prognosis, produced by traumatic shearing stresses resulting in diffuse axonal injury (DAI). Computed tomography (CT) in acute phase is considered to have a limited role for the detection of non-hemorrhagic or petechial hemorrhagic DAI lesions. New generation multidetector CT scanners allow faster acquis ition of thinner-slice images and post-processing reformations. Three patients with severe closed head trauma underwent CT examinations using a multidetector scanner, a few hours and the day after injury. The review of original images with narrow window width and integration with reconstruction of thinner slices from raw-data and post-processing multiplanar reformations (MPR) helped to detect the onset of hypodense or predominantly hypodense areas of corpus callosum, not present at admission and afterwards confirmed by MRI.
Adolescent; Adult; Corpus Callosum; Diffuse Axonal Injury; Early Diagnosis; Female; Glasgow Coma Scale; Humans; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Male; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Settore MED/24 - Urologia
ott-2004
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/234115
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