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Neuroradiology Case of the Week

Case 223

J. Carmen Timberlake, MD, and P-L Westesson, MD, PhD, DDS

Clinical Presentation: A two-week-old infant presented with lethargy and hypoxia and was admitted for rule-out sepsis evaluation.

Imaging Findings: Routine brain MR imaging was performed with and without contrast. Abnormal high signal in right transverse sinus on T1 and T2-weighted images consistent with right transverse sinus thrombosis. No evidence of acute infarct.

Figure 1: Sagittal T1-weighted (A), axial FLAIR (B), and axial T2-weighted (C) images demonstrate abnormal hyperintense signal in the right transverse sinus.

Figure 2: Axial FLAIR (A) and coronal (B) gradient echo images demonstrate normal signal void in the left transverse sinus compared to the hyperintense signal in the right transverse sinus.

Diagnosis: Transverse sinus thrombosis

Discussion:

Common causes of venous sinus thrombosis in children:

  • Septic/infectious causes:

    – Encephalitis
    – Bacterial meningitis
    – Otitis media
    – Mastoiditis
    – Retrograde orbital infections

  • Aseptic causes:

    – Severe dehydration in infancy
    – Hypercoagulopathy
    – Cyanotic congenital heart disease
    – Leukemic infiltrates

Causes of venous sinus thrombosis in adults:

  • Acute dehydration
  • Chemotherapeutic agents
  • Hypercoagulable states and coagulopathies
  • Iatrogenic (indwelling venous catheters)
  • Malnutrition
  • Pregnancy
  • Trauma

Complications:

  • infarction (in approximately 50% of cases)
  • seizures
  • hemorrhage
  • hemorrhagic infarction.

CT findings:

  • Cord sign = high density cord or dot (clot) in the vein. Triangle of high density in sagittal sinus on noncontrast CT.
  • Delta sign = enhancement around a clot in the sinus.
  • Appearance of medullary veins indicating collateral venous drainage.

MR findings:

  • Acute thrombus:

    – Isointense on T1WI
    – Absence of flow void on T1WI
    – Hypointense on T2W
    – Signal void on gradient echo

  • Subacute thrombus:

    – Hyperintense on T1WI and T2WI
    – Gray signal (representing lack of flow) on phase contrast angiography

References:

  1. Behrman RE, Kliegman RM, and Jenson HB. Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics, 16th edition. W.B. Saunders Company, 2000.
  2. Grossman RI and Yousem DM. Neuroradiology: The Requisites, Second Edition. Mosby, 2003.
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