| Literature DB >> 34876938 |
Jagoda Jacków-Nowicka1, Jacek Jagiełło1, Edyta Dziadkowiak2, Joanna Bladowska1, Marek Sąsiadek1, Anna Zimny1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Acute cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) is a rare condition that can lead to a serious clinical state; thus, prompt diagnosis and treatment are mandatory. Head computed tomography (CT) plays a crucial role in the initial prompt diagnosis in the emergency setting. The aim of the study was to retrospectively analyse emergency head CT studies and the rate of incorrect diagnoses and main sources of pitfalls.Entities:
Keywords: brain CT; cerebral venous thrombosis; pitfalls
Year: 2021 PMID: 34876938 PMCID: PMC8634425 DOI: 10.5114/pjr.2021.109490
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pol J Radiol ISSN: 1733-134X
Results of computed tomography (CT) evaluation of the patients with the correct diagnosis of cerebral venous thrombosis in the emergency CT studies
| No | Patient’s sex and age | First radiological diagnosis based on emergency CT | Retrospective analysis of emergency CT examinations |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Female | CVT | Correct diagnosis of hyperdense anterior aspect of SSS with bilateral haemorrhagic frontal lesions |
| 2 | Famale | CVT | Correct diagnosis of hyperdense SSS and a cortical vein with haemorrhagic lesions within the right parietal cortex |
| 3 | Female | CVT | Correct diagnosis of hyperdense left TS and SS with a non-haemorrhagic oedema within the left temporo-parietal cortex |
| 4 | Male | CVT | Correct diagnosis of bilateral hyperdense TS, SS and SSS with filling defects and brain swelling |
| 5 | Female | CVT | Correct diagnosis of hyperdense SS with hemorrhagic lesions in the temporo-parietal cortex |
| 6 | Female | deep CVT | Correct diagnosis of hyperdense deep veins and the left SS, straight sinus and Galen vein with bilateral oedema of the basal ganglia and deep structures |
| 7 | Female | CVT | Correct diagnosis of hyperdense TS, SS, and SSS with no parenchymal lesions |
| 8 | Female | CVT | Correct diagnosis of the filling defect within right SS with no parenchymal lesions |
| 9 | Male | CVT | Correct diagnosis of hyperdense bilateral TS and SS with no parenchymal lesions |
| 10 | Male | Deep CVT +superficial CVT | Correct diagnosis of the hyperdense straight sinus, Galen vein, ISS, and SSS with no parenchymal lesions |
| 11 | Female | CVT | Correct diagnosis of the hyperdense SSS, TS, and SS with no parenchymal lesions |
| 12 | Female | CVT | Correct diagnosis of hyperdense SS with no parenchymal lesions |
| 13 | Male | CVT | Correct diagnosis of filling defect of the left SS and TS with no parenchymal lesions |
| 14 | Male | CVT | Correct diagnosis of filling defect within left TS with no parenchymal lesions |
| 15 | Female | CVT | Correct diagnosis of filling defect within right TS and SS with no brain lesions due to CVT |
yo – years old, CVT – cerebral venous thrombosis of the superficial venous system, (CT-c) – computed tomography without contrast administration, (CT+c) – computed tomography with contrast administration, SSS – superior sagittal sinus, SS – sigmoid sinus, TS – transverse sinus
Results of computed tomography (CT) evaluation of the patients with incorrect interpretation of the emergency CT studies
| No | Patient’s sex and age | First radiological diagnosis based on emergency CT | Retrospective analysis of emergency CT examinations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Group 1 – parenchymal and vascular pathology present | |||
| 1 | Female | Normal | Overlooked minimal oedema of the left frontal cortex, overlooked hyperdense anterior aspect of SSS |
| 2 | Female | Normal | Overlooked subtle oedema of both thalami, overlooked hyperdense straight sinus and deep veins |
| 3 | Female | Brain tumour | Misinterpreted non-haemorrhagic right temporal lesion, overlooked hyperdense right SS |
| 4 | Male | Haemorrhagic metastases | Misinterpreted haemorrhagic right fronto-parietal cortical, lesions, overlooked hyperdense small cortical veins |
| 5 | Female | Brain tumour | Misinterpreted non-haemorrhagic right temporal lesion, overlooked hyperdense right SS |
| 6 | Male | Haemorrhagic brain contusion | Misinterpreted haemorrhagic lesion within right occipital cortex, overlooked hyperdense right SS |
| 7 | Male | Lesion of uncertain aetiology: haemorrhagic brain contusion or metastases | Misinterpreted haemorrhagic lesions within the left frontal cortex, thrombosed anterior aspect of SSS not visible |
| 8 | Female | Haemorrhagic brain contusion | Misinterpreted hematomas in the right frontal and parietal cortex, overlooked thrombosed cortical veins |
| 9 | Male | Multiple hemorrhagic lesions | Misinterpreted parenchymal lesions in both hemispheres of the frontal and parietal lobes, overlooked thrombosed cortical veins |
| Group 2 – only vascular lesions present | |||
| 10 | Female | Normal | Parenchymal lesions not present, overlooked single hyperdense cortical vein in the right temporal region |
| 11 | Male | Complex head trauma, temporal bone fracture, artefacts | Parenchymal lesions not present, overlooked thrombosed right TS and SS due to motion artefacts diagnosed in the follow-up MRI |
| 12 | Female | Middle ear infection | Parenchymal lesions not present, overlooked hyperdense left SS and filling defect |
| 13 | Male | Pericerebellar hematoma | Parenchymal lesions not present, misinterpreted hyperdense right TS and SS |
| 14 | Female | Mastoiditis | Parenchymal lesions not present, misinterpreted filling defect within right JIV SS and TS |
| Group 3 – only parenchymal lesions present | |||
| 15 | Female | Differential diagnosis: haemorrhagic ischemic or venous infarction or brain contusion | Misinterpreted large haemorrhagic lesion within the left temporal cortex, thrombosed TS, SS and SSS not visible even in CT+c |
| Group 4 – no lesions present | |||
| 16 | Male | Normal | Parenchymal lesions not present, no vascular lesions visible |
Reasons for the incorrect diagnosis of cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT) in the emergency computed tomography examinations
| CVT pathology | Cases overlooked | Cases misinterpreted as: | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brain lesions | |||
| Non-haemorrhagic | 2 cases | Brain tumours (2 cases) | |
| Haemorrhagic | 0 cases | Metastases (1 case) | |
| Vessel thrombosis | |||
| Superior sagittal sinus | 1 case | 0 cases | |
| Sigmoid sinus | 4 cases | Pericerebellar haematoma | |
| Transverse sinus | 1 case | Pericerebellar haematoma | |
| Straight sinus | 2 cases | 0 cases | |
| Cortical veins | 4 cases | 0 cases | |
| Deep veins | 1 case | 0 cases | |
Figure 1Cases of cerebral venous thrombosis that were reported as normal due to overlooking the thrombosed hyperdense vessels (arrows) such as the anterior aspect of the superior sagittal sinus (A), straight sinus (B), right cortical vein (C), and the left transverse sinus (D)
Figure 2Cases of haemorrhagic infarctions due to cerebral venous thrombosis reported as other haemorrhagic lesions such as brain contusion (A) or vascular lesion of uncertain aetiology (B) because of the absence of hyperdense thrombosed venous vessels on emergency computed tomography images. Note a very characteristic pattern of multiple ovoid haemorrhagic lesions surrounded by hypodense oedema in the cortical-subcortical location that should always raise a suspicion of bleeding during cerebral venous thrombosis
Figure 3Cases of brain lesions during cerebral venous thrombosis (short arrows) that were reported as other pathologies due to overlooking the thrombosed vessels (long arrows) such as right transverse sinus (A), bilateral cortical veins (B), and posterior aspects of the superior sagittal sinuses (C, D). Hypodense cortical oedema in the right temporal lobe was reported as low-grade glioma (A) while haemorrhagic venous infarctions were reported as haemorrhagic metastases (B), unequivocal vascular lesion (C), and brain contusion (D)