Imaging Diagnosis of Nontraumatic Neurologic Emergencies

Summary

This article addresses an array of emergency situations and the associated best imaging practices, as well as nontraumatic spine emergency, and the differential diagnosis of intracranial hemorrhage, its appearance on computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging, and its complications.

  • critical care
  • tomography
  • neuroimaging
  • neuroimaging
  • ischemia
  • magnetic resonance imaging

Wendy R. K. Smoker, MD, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, Iowa, USA, addressed an array of emergency situations, including orbital pathologies affecting vision, neck infections that may affect the airway, odontogenic infections, and intracranial complications of acute sinusitis.

Traumatic vision loss can be caused by open globe injuries, lens dislocation, retinal detachment, or orbital fractures. Other emergency orbital conditions include acute orbital infection, pseudotumor, subperiosteal orbital hematoma, and carotid-cavernous fistula (Table 1).

Table 1.

Acute Orbital Conditions Causing Vision Loss

Several types of throat and neck conditions can threaten the airway (Table 2). Dr Smoker emphasized the importance of butterfly imaging for these conditions. In patients with amalgams causing artifacts in areas of interest, it is important to get angle or butterfly images to see behind the amalgams.

Table 2.

Throat and Neck Emergencies That Threaten the Airway

Frontal or ethmoid and sphenoid sinusitis infections have the potential for intracranial complications, but direct extension from the maxillary sinus to critical structures is rare. Acute sphenoid sinusitis can be complicated by epidural abscess in the middle cranial fossa and extend into the masticator space. Superior ophthalmic vein thrombosis or cavernous sinus thrombosis can be seen in sphenoid sinus disease. Acute frontal sinusitis can be complicated with Pott puffy tumor or intracerebral abscess.

Patrick Turski, MD, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, USA, discussed the differential diagnosis of intracranial hemorrhage, its appearance on computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and its complications. Spontaneous primary intracranial hemorrhage is caused by hypertension (36%) or amyloid angiopathy, whereas secondary intracranial hemorrhage can be due to aneurysm (36%), arteriovenous malformation (AVM), and other (17%), including hemorrhagic transformation of ischemic infarction, venous thrombosis, hemorrhagic neoplasms, and vasculitis. Table 3 summarizes the imaging evaluation of intracranial hemorrhage.

Table 3.

Imaging Evaluation of Intracranial Hemorrhage

Hypertension leads to arteriolar degeneration, resulting in lacunar infarcts caused by arteriolar sclerosis or Charcot-Bouchard aneurysms caused by arteriolar dilatation. A focal area of enhancement > 1.5 mm indicates a Charcot-Bouchard aneurysm. The most common location of hypertensive hemorrhage is the putamen and external capsule (60%), followed by the thalamus (20%), pons (10%), cerebellum (5%), and subcortical white matter (5%). A poor prognosis is associated with age > 80 years, hemorrhage volume > 30 cc, and posterior fossa or intraventricular extension. CT of a hematoma over time shows increasing attenuation due to clot retraction, cells, and platelets (50 to 60 HU), followed by a 1.5-HU/d decrease in attenuation due to increased hydration. Rim enhancement appears in 1 week and persists for 8 to 12 weeks.

Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) accounts for about 20% of spontaneous hemorrhages in the elderly. It is associated with amyloid deposition in the vessel walls and surrounding tissues. Patients aged > 55 years with lobar, cortical, or subcortical microhemorrhages meet the Boston criteria for probable CAA.

In a study of aneurysm growth and rupture, 18% of all aneurysms grew during the follow-up of 2.4 years [Villablanca JP et al. Radiology. 2013]. There was a 12-fold increase in rupture for growing aneurysms of all sizes. Other risk factors were smoking and aneurysm size > 5 mm at presentation.

Vascular malformations that can lead to hemorrhage include pial AVM, dural arteriovenous fistula, cavernoma, and developmental venous anomaly. Ischemic infarction can undergo hemorrhagic transformation. The risk is increased following therapy, with increased permeability of the infarct core. Venous thrombosis can occur in a variety of conditions, including Crohn disease, transverse sinus–vein of Labbe thrombosis, and cerebritis. Vasculitis can be primary or secondary due to autoimmune diseases, drug use, or other causes.

In conclusion, CT and CT angiography are the primary tools for diagnosing nontraumatic central nervous system hemorrhage. MRI with susceptibility-weighted imaging is used for amyloid angiopathy. Imaging studies should be used to determine the location, look for evidence of active bleeding, identify underlying lesions, and determine the size of hematomas and mass effect.

According to E. Turgut Tali, MD, Gazi University School of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey, nontraumatic spine emergency (NTSE) should be considered in patients with spontaneous limb weakness, paresthesia, progressive inability to ambulate, cauda equina syndrome, or rapid onset of a severe neurologic syndrome. The NTSE incidence rate varies from 11 to 70 per million in different countries and may result from a variety of causes [van den Berg MEL et al. Neuroepidemiology. 2010]. Clinical findings and symptoms are often nonspecific. The most common causes are tumors, inflammation, and infections. Types of NTSE conditions include congenital disorders, degenerative diseases, inflammation, neoplasms, tumor-like lesions, vascular disorders, hematologic diseases, and metabolic diseases.

The pathophysiology of myelopathy involves both static factors causing compression and dynamic factors resulting in repetitive spinal cord injury. A history and physical examination often localize the abnormality to the spine. Prompt imaging of the spine, spinal cord, and roots is necessary to evaluate the abnormality. MRI is the modality of choice, with the addition of fat-suppressed and contrast-enhanced sequences. Digital subtraction angiography is useful for evaluating vascular emergencies.

Conventional MRI sequences cannot reliably differentiate between benign compressions and those secondary to myelomatous infiltration. Diffusion-weighted imaging may be useful in such cases. Early imaging diagnosis of spondylitis, discitis, and epidural infection facilitates prompt treatment. Spinal cord injury caused by rheumatoid arthritis is characterized by transverse atlantal ligament laxity and atlantoaxial subluxation, vertical subluxation, odontoid erosion, and pannus around the odontoid.

Spinal cord involvement in multiple sclerosis typically occurs in the dorsolateral regions of the cervical cord. Neuromyelitis optica is characterized by lesions extending contiguously over ≥ 3 vertebral segments. Acute transverse myelitis affects > 2 vertebral segments and involves smooth cord expansion in the central cord location. In Guillain-Barré syndrome, imaging shows a normal conus/slight prominence of root size, avid enhancement of the pial surface of the distal core, and cauda equina demyelination. Mass effect of vasogenic edema, slight cord swelling, and variable enhancement are seen in acute disseminated encephalomyelitis.

Schwannoma is the most common intradural extra-medullary mass. Imaging shows cord displacement, meniscus sign, and marked enhancement. Ependymomas occur in the central canal, most commonly in the cervical, thoracal, and filar regions. In patients with intracranial hypotension due to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage, radionuclide and CT cisternography can localize the CSF leak. Magnetic resonance cisternomyelography with intrathecal gadolinium has 90% sensitivity for CSF leakage [Algin O et al. Neuroradiol. 2011].

Nontraumatic causes of spine injury should be considered when a patient presents with acute spine symptoms. The primary diagnostic challenge is to identify a treatable abnormality.

View Summary