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How to distinguish between bleeding and coagulated extradural hematomas on the plain CT scanning

✍ Scribed by O. F. Petersen; J. O. Espersen


Publisher
Springer
Year
1984
Tongue
English
Weight
688 KB
Volume
26
Category
Article
ISSN
0028-3940

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✦ Synopsis


Four types of extradural hematoma could be separated at examination of the plain CT scan in 54 extradural hematomas. Two major groups appear: the still bleeding hematoma showing either generally low attenuation values of "holes", and a coagulated homogeneous type with generally high attenuation values. The attenuation values of the bleeding - liquid part of hematoma - were correlated to hemoglobin concentration in blood, to which clots were not related. Seven extradural hematomas grew and coagulated on repeated preoperative CT scans. In two cases intravenous contrast was given to the bleeding type of hematoma, and the contrast media appeared in "holes", but not in areas of high attenuation value. It is easy to distinguish between the different types of hematoma on the plain CT scan, and the separation by eye between the still bleeding and the coagulated extradural hematoma seems reliable.