Evolution of Intracranial Hemorrhage


KEY FACTS

Imaging

  • CT: Hemorrhage appearance based on density

    • Hyperdense mass (50-70 Hounsfield units) on NECT

    • Peripheral edema develops over 1st few days

  • MR: Intracranial hemorrhage staging based on T1 and T2 signal characteristics

    • MR as sensitive as CT in hyperacute phase; more sensitive in subacute/chronic phases

    • Hematoma matures more slowly in center (core) than in periphery

      • Therefore MR signal change proceeds peripherally to centrally

Pathology

  • Very common: Hypertension (HTN), cerebral amyloid angiopathy, trauma, hemorrhagic vascular malformations

  • Common: Infarct with reperfusion, coagulopathy, blood dyscrasia, drug abuse, tumor (glioma, metastases)

Clinical Issues

  • Incidence: ~ 30-40 per 100,000

  • HTN, ↑ age most important risk factor

    • Rate of anticoagulant-related intracerebral hematoma (ICH) has increased over last decades (up to 20%)

    • ICH with warfarin = higher mortality (2x at 3 months)

  • Common signs, symptoms

    • HTN (90%), vomiting (50%), ↓ consciousness (50%), headache (40%), seizures (10%)

  • Prognosis depends on size, initial level of consciousness, location

    • 35-52% dead at 1 month (50% of whom died in first 2 days); 59% dead at 1 year

    • Large hematoma (> 30 mL), swirl sign on NECT → higher mortality

    • Active contrast extravasation → higher mortality

Diagnostic Checklist

  • Marked heterogeneity of acute hematoma on CT predicts hematoma growth and ↑ mortality

  • Swirl sign, contrast extravasation enhancement indicate hematoma growth and ↑ mortality

  • Fluid-fluid levels → question of underlying coagulopathy

Axial graphic shows the evolution of parenchymal hemorrhage from hyperacute
(intracellular oxy-Hgb) to acute
(intracellular deoxy-Hgb with surrounding edema). Early
and late subacute (intra- and extracellular met-Hgb, respectively) are followed by a chronic cystic cavity
with a hemosiderin stain.

Axial NECT shows a hyperdense mass related to an acute left cerebellar hemorrhage
with minimal surrounding edema in a patient with hypertension.

Axial T1WI MR in the same patient shows that the cerebellar hemorrhage
is predominantly isointense and mildly hypointense to the surrounding brain parenchyma, indicating hyperacute blood products.

Axial T2WI MR in the same patient shows the hyperacute hemorrhage to be hyperintense to the surrounding brain parenchyma with a peripheral hypointense rim
. Intraparenchymal hemorrhage evolves from peripheral to central with the central core maturing more slowly.

TERMINOLOGY

Abbreviations

  • Intracerebral hematoma (ICH)

Synonyms

  • Intraparenchymal hemorrhage

Definitions

  • Parenchymal blood collection

IMAGING

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