Low-level echogenicity in intraventricular hemorrhage versus ventriculitis |
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Authors: | Grant, EG White, EM Schellinger, D Rosenbach, D |
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Affiliation: | Department of Radiology, Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, D.C. |
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Abstract: | Serial cranial sonograms of 55 neonates with large perinatal intraventricular/intraparenchymal hemorrhages and moderate-to-severe posthemorrhagic hydrocephalus were reviewed. In all 55 patients, the ventricles were initially enlarged and filled with anechoic cerebrospinal fluid, which contained discrete hyperechoic fragments of hematoma. Between 7 and 25 days after the initial hemorrhagic episode, however, diffuse, low-level echogenicity appeared in the ventricles of 34 patients. The low-level echogenicity was transient and persisted for 7-59 days (average, 18 days). In 32 patients, low-level echogenicity was a benign finding associated with prior intraventricular hemorrhage. In two patients, the low-level echogenicity was associated with ventriculitis. Low-level echogenicity appeared, increased, then cleared, but reappeared with the onset of ventriculitis in these two patients. Thickening of the ependyma and abnormal periventricular echogenicity, signs of inflammation, were also present. Although low-level echogenicity may commonly be a benign finding, the possibility of ventriculitis should not be ignored. |
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