| Literature DB >> 36032177 |
Jordan Mah1,2, Angela Lee3, James N Scott4, Deirdre Church1,5.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Meningitis; Neurological infections; Pneumocephalus; Pneumococcal infections; Sepsis; Streptococcus pneumoniae
Year: 2022 PMID: 36032177 PMCID: PMC9403551 DOI: 10.1016/j.idcr.2022.e01601
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IDCases ISSN: 2214-2509
Fig. 1Otomastoiditis, meningitis and subdural empyema. Axial non-contrast CT (A) shows several small gas/air blebs located adjacent to the interhemispheric falx (arrow) in the extra-axial space. Axial post-gadolinium fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) (B), axial post-gadolinium T1-weighted (C), coronal post-gadolinium T1-weighted (D), and axial diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) (E) MRI images. MRI more fully characterized the infection and demonstrated the presence of a small subdural empyema. The FLAIR sequence shows hyperintense sulci involving the left cerebral hemisphere, suggesting meningitis in this clinical setting. The axial post-gadolinium sequence shows patchy enhancement of the left mastoid sinus (arrow) that had contiguous extension to involve the dura beneath the left temporal lobe. On the post-gadolinium coronal T1 weighted sequence, a small rim enhancing extra-axial collection is identified bordering the superior margin of the left tentorium (arrow). The left tentorium is thicker and has greater enhancement than on the right side. DWI is especially helpful and shows that this small extra-axial collection has restricted diffusion (arrowhead) that is characteristic of subdural empyema. A small intraluminal filling defect within a left-sided superior convexity cortical vein (not shown) indicated the added presence of non-occlusive cortical vein thrombosis.