| Literature DB >> 20830269 |
Sang Soo Kang1, Seung Hwan Jung, Myoung Sun Kim, Sung Jun Hong, Young Jun Yoon, Keun Man Shin.
Abstract
Spontaneous retropharyngeal hematoma is rare and difficult to diagnosis early. A 23-year-old male spontaneously developed acute onset of neck pain, limitation of neck motion, and mild dysphagia. Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated blood products in prevertebral space from C2 to C4, suggesting a diagnosis of retropharyngeal hematoma. We report a rare case of spontaneous retropharyngeal hematoma causing neck pain.Entities:
Keywords: cervical; hematoma; prevertebral; retropharyngeal
Year: 2010 PMID: 20830269 PMCID: PMC2935985 DOI: 10.3344/kjp.2010.23.3.211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Pain ISSN: 2005-9159
Fig. 1(A) Initial lateral cervical spine radiograph shows increased thickness of prevertebral soft tissue: 8 mm at C3 and 10.5 mm at C4. (B) At the 5-day follow-up point, lateral cervical spine radiograph shows a normalization of shadow of prevertebral space: 4.5 mm at C3 and 6 mm at C4.
Fig. 2Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) shows retropharyngeal hematoma. (A) Sagittal T1 weighted image shows an intermediate signal intensity at the prevertebral space. (B) Sagittal T2 weighted image shows a high signal prevertebral collection with depth 5 mm and length 5 cm, spreading from C2 to C4. (C) Follow-up sagittal T2 weighted image shows a nearly completely absorbed prevertebral collection compared to initial MRI finding.