Imaging of Intracranial Hemorrhage: Types & Key Features

Intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) represents bleeding within the skull, either in the brain parenchyma or its coverings. CT is the first-line modality for acute cases, while MRI is useful in subacute/chronic stages and problem-solving.


📌 Types of Intracranial Hemorrhage & Imaging Features

1. Epidural Hematoma (EDH)

  • Cause: Trauma, usually arterial (middle meningeal artery).
  • CT:
    • Biconvex/lens-shaped hyperdensity.
    • Does not cross sutures but can cross dural attachments.
  • MRI: T1/T2 variable; helps in subacute/chronic EDH.
  • Clinical clue: Often with skull fracture; lucid interval.

2. Subdural Hematoma (SDH)

  • Cause: Tearing of bridging veins.
  • CT:
    • Crescent-shaped, concave hyperdensity.
    • Crosses sutures but not dural reflections (falx, tentorium).
  • MRI: Sensitive for isodense or chronic SDH (T1 hyperintense if subacute).
  • Clinical clue: Common in elderly, alcoholics, anticoagulation.

3. Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (SAH)

  • Cause: Ruptured berry aneurysm, trauma.
  • CT:
    • Hyperdensity in basal cisterns, sulci, ventricles.
  • MRI: FLAIR shows sulcal hyperintensity; SWI sensitive.
  • CTA/MRA: Evaluate aneurysm/vascular malformation.

4. Intraparenchymal Hemorrhage (IPH)

  • Cause: Hypertension, trauma, tumor, vascular malformations.
  • CT:
    • Well-defined hyperdense focus within parenchyma ± surrounding edema.
  • MRI:
    • Signal depends on hematoma age (oxyHb → deoxyHb → metHb → hemosiderin).
    • SWI detects microbleeds.

5. Intraventricular Hemorrhage (IVH)

  • Cause: Extension from SAH/ICH, trauma, vascular lesion.
  • CT: Hyperdense layering in ventricles (“blood–CSF level”).
  • MRI: T1/T2 signal changes, SWI sensitive.
  • Clinical clue: Hydrocephalus common.

🕒 Aging of Hemorrhage on MRI (Quick Recap)

  • Hyperacute (<24h): OxyHb → Iso T1, Hyper T2.
  • Acute (1–3d): DeoxyHb → Iso T1, Hypo T2.
  • Early Subacute (3–7d): Intracellular MetHb → Hyper T1, Hypo T2.
  • Late Subacute (1–2w): Extracellular MetHb → Hyper T1 & T2.
  • Chronic (>2w): Hemosiderin → Hypo T2 (rim).

🔎 Teaching Pearls

  • EDH = convex, SDH = concave.
  • SAH → think cisterns/sulci, best seen on CT within 24h.
  • MRI SWI is highly sensitive for microhemorrhages & cavernomas.
  • Always assess for underlying cause: trauma, aneurysm, AVM, tumor, coagulopathy.

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