The radiological interpretation of possible microbleeds after moderate or severe traumatic brain injury: a longitudinal study

Introduction In order to augment the certainty of the radiological interpretation of “possible microbleeds” after traumatic brain injury (TBI), we assessed their longitudinal evolution on 3-T SWI in patients with moderate/severe TBI. Methods Standardized 3-T SWI and T1-weighted imaging were obtained...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroradiology 2022-06, Vol.64 (6), p.1145-1156
Hauptverfasser: van der Eerden, Anke W., van den Heuvel, Thomas L. A., Maas, Marnix C., Vart, Priya, Vos, Pieter E., Platel, Bram, Góraj, Bozena M., Manniesing, Rashindra
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction In order to augment the certainty of the radiological interpretation of “possible microbleeds” after traumatic brain injury (TBI), we assessed their longitudinal evolution on 3-T SWI in patients with moderate/severe TBI. Methods Standardized 3-T SWI and T1-weighted imaging were obtained 3 and 26 weeks after TBI in 31 patients. Their microbleeds were computer-aided detected and classified by a neuroradiologist as no, possible, or definite at baseline and follow-up, separately ( single-scan evaluation). Thereafter, the classifications were re-evaluated after comparison between the time-points ( post-comparison evaluation). We selected the possible microbleeds at baseline at single-scan evaluation and recorded their post-comparison classification at follow-up. Results Of the 1038 microbleeds at baseline, 173 were possible microbleeds. Of these, 53.8% corresponded to no microbleed at follow-up. At follow-up, 30.6% were possible and 15.6% were definite. Of the 120 differences between baseline and follow-up, 10% showed evidence of a pathophysiological change over time. Proximity to extra-axial injury and proximity to definite microbleeds were independently predictive of becoming a definite microbleed at follow-up. The reclassification level differed between anatomical locations. Conclusions Our findings support disregarding possible microbleeds in the absence of clinical consequences. In selected cases, however, a follow-up SWI-scan could be considered to exclude evolution into a definite microbleed.
ISSN:0028-3940
1432-1920
DOI:10.1007/s00234-021-02839-z