Epidural Hematoma, Variant


KEY FACTS

Terminology

  • “Typical” epidural hematoma (EDH)

    • Arterial laceration

    • 90-95% supratentorial (temporoparietal most common)

    • Biconvex, unilateral

  • Atypical EDH

    • Unusual etiology

    • Unusual location

    • Unusual shape or density

Imaging

  • Venous EDH (10% of EDHs)

    • Fracture (linear, diastatic) crosses dural venous sinus

    • Skull base, vertex

    • Easily overlooked

    • Coronal, sagittal reformats key to diagnosis

  • Anterior temporal EDH (10% of EDHs)

    • Middle cranial fossa

      • In front of, not lateral to, temporal lobe

    • Fracture crosses sphenoparietal sinus

    • Generally asymptomatic (1-2 cm, stable size)

    • No reported cases requiring surgery

  • Vertex EDH (1-2% of EDHs)

    • Fracture crosses, lacerates superior sagittal sinus

    • Accumulates slowly

    • Symptoms often delayed

    • Easily overlooked, size underestimated on axial CT

    • Coronal, sagittal reformatted images key

  • Clival EDH (< 1% of EDHs)

    • Lacerates clival venous plexus

    • Self-limited; dura tightly attached, so rarely large

    • Asymptomatic unless associated vascular, cranial nerve injury

    • Biconvex hyperdensity immediately posterior to clivus

    • Sagittal reformatted images key to diagnosis

Axial graphic depicts different basilar skull fractures that cross, and may injure, important vascular structures. Linear skull fracture crosses the right transverse sinus
. The lacerated sinus causes a venous epidermal hematoma (EDH)
to accumulate. The injured sinus often thromboses
.

Axial NECT scan in a 26-year-old man who fell 10 meters onto his head shows a large left temporal lobe contusion
. A small biconvex hyperdense fluid collection
is seen adjacent to the right transverse sinus.

Bone CT in the same patient shows a diastatic fracture through the right lambdoid suture
.

Sagittal CT venogram shows that the transverse sinus
is elevated and displaced anteriorly by a hyperdense venous EDH. Note that the venous EDH
lies both above and below the site of dural attachment. Venous EDHs commonly cross dural attachments, whereas classic arterial EDHs rarely do.

TERMINOLOGY

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