Pathology of the Nervous System

Stacy T Black BS, R.T. (R)

Meningitis

An acute inflammation of the pia mater, arachnoid, membranes covering the brain and spinal cord.

Infecting organisms can reach meninges through…

Middle ear

Upper respiratory tract

Frontal sinus infection

Bloodstream from infection from other site.

Bacterial Meningitis – Caused by Haemophilus in children/neonates, and by meningococcus / pneumococcus in adults and adolescents.

Meningitis cont..

Viral meningitis – Caused by mumps, poliovirus, and occasionally by herpes simplex.

**Bacterial is most common form (kissing, sharing toothbrush etc.)

Radiographic Appearance

CT / MRI good at visualizing inflammation.

Plain films can demonstrate osteomylitis, paranasal sinusitis, or skull fx as underlying cause of meningitis.

Treatment

Antiviral and antibiotic medications

Encephalitis

Viral inflammation of the brain and meninges. Symptoms range from mild headache to seizures and coma.

Many viruses and a few other microbes can cause encephalitis. Herpes simplex is the most common identifiable cause of encephalitis, but often the cause cannot be found at all.

several arboviruses (meaning viruses spread by insects) cause encephalitis. Vectors such as mosquitoes can transfer the virus to humans.

Encephalitis cont..

Radiographic appearance.

A mass effect is most common and may be seen as a midline shift or as a focal mass compressing ventricles or the sylvian cisterns.

Treatment

A definite diagnosis of herpes is essential before beginning treatment because must rule out it being a abscess or tumor.

Treated with antiviral drugs.

Brain Abscess

A localized infection of the brain cased by a microorganism affecting the grey and white matter. Usually a result of infections of the middle ear, paranasal sinuses, mastoid air cells, or systemic infections.

Brain abscess cont..

Radiographic appearance

MR and CT used to image an area of abnormal density with poorly defined borders and a mass effect reflecting vascular congestion and edema.

Plain films may show evidence of underlying sinusitis, mastoiditis, or osteomyelitis.

Treatment

Antibiotics or for severe cases craniotomy.

Subdural Empyema

Infection in the space between the inner surface of the dura and the outer surface of the arachnoid.

Makes up 25% of all intracranial infections

Most common cause is the spread of infection from the frontal and ethmoid sinuses

Subdural empyema cont..

Radiographic appearance

Fluid collection adjacent to the inner border of the skull with displacement of ventricular structures.

Treatment

Medical emergency. Immediate drainage of area and sinuses.

Epidural empyema

Infection outside the dural membrane and beneath the inner table of the skull.

Invariably associated with osteomylitis

Originates from an infection in the ear or paranasal sinuses.

Epidural empyema cont..

Radiographic appearance

Poorly defined area of low density adjacent to the inner table of the skull.

Treatment

Medical emergency. Immediate drainage of area and sinuses.

Osteomyelitis

Suppurative process from the paransal sinuses, mastiod air cells, and scalp.

Infection of the cranial bones due to nuero disorder that develops 1 to 2 weeks after the onset of signs and symptoms

Osteomyelitis cont..

Radiographic appearance

Multiple radiolucent areas of the skull. Attempts at bone regeneration produce multiple areas of poorly reactive sclerosis.

Treatment

Antibiotic and or surgery.

Tumors of the CNS

Neoplasms present with seizure disorders or gradual neurological deficits like thinking slow, weakness and or headaches.

50% are primary lesions with the other half metastases

Tumors cont.

Radiographic appearance

MRI modality of choice.

Treatment

Based on location, type and extent.

Surgery, chemo and radiation therapy are all choices and can be performed with each other.

Glioma

Most common primary malignant brain tumor that consist of glial cells that have the ability to multiply.

Spread by direct extension and can cross from one cerebral hemisphere to the other.

Gliomas cont..

Types

Glioblastomas – highly malignant lesions that are predominantly cerebral.

Astrocytomas – 70% of all gliomas. Slow growing tumors that have infiltrative characteristics and can form large cavaties.

Ependymoma

Medullablastoma

olgidendrocytoma

Glioma cont..

Radiographic appearance

Most commonly seen as a single, nonhomogeneous masses that may have edema.

Treatment

Surgery or radiation therapy

Meningioma

Benign tumor that arises from the arachnoid lining and attached itself to the dura.

Seizures and neurologic defects are most often caused by mass effect.

Radiographic appearance

Anatomic distortion. A thin rim of CSF may separate the tumor from the adjacent brain.

Treatment

Surgical resection

Pituitary Adenoma

Tumors that arise form the anterior lobe and constitute more than 10% of all intracranial tumors

Nonsecreting and hormone secreting type.

Effects the ACTH and TSH hormones

Adrenocorticotropic Hormone – stimulates the adrenal cortex to secrete cortisol.

Thyroid stimulating hormone - regulates the endocrine function of the thyroid gland.

Pituitary adenoma cont…

Can cause Cushing’s disease and hyperthyroidism.

Radiographic appearance

MRI modality of choice.

Lesion associated with contralateral deviation of the pituitary stalk and an upwardly convex contour of the gland.

Treatment

Surgery ; Radiation therapy

MetastaticCarcinoma

Cancer that reaches the brain through hematogenous spread (spread through the bloodstream)

The most common neoplasms that metastasize to the brain arise in the lung and breast.

Metastatic carcinoma cont…

Radiographic appearance

Single or multiple masses situated at the junction between gray matter and white matter.

Treatment

Chemotherapy

Radiation therapy

surgery

Epidural Hematoma

Hematomas caused by acute arterial bleeding and commonly form over the parietotemporal convexity.

Cause mass effect and acute neurological symptoms

Epidural hematoma cont…

Radiographic appearance

Midline shift towards opposite side of injury.

Compression of upper mid-brain and brainstem.

Treatment

Emergency surgical decompression

Subdural Hematoma

Venous bleeding, most commonly from ruptured veins between the dura and meninges.

Because of the low pressure tend to have a chronic gradual course with symptoms of headaches, agitation and other neurologic problems, it is hard to diagnose early without radiology exam.

Subdural hematoma cont...

Radiographic appearance

Zone of increased density that follows the surface of the brain and has a crescent shape adjacent to the inner table of the skull.

Treatment

Small subdural hematomas will resorb.

Severe ones require surgical evacuation of the hematoma

Drug therapy

Intraventricular catheter.

Cerebral Contusion

Injury to the brain tissue caused by movement of the brain within the calvaria after blunt trauma to the skull.

Contusions happen when the brain strikes the rough surfaces of the skull such as the orbital roof and petrous ridges

Cerebral contusion con…

Frontal and anterior temporal regions are the most common sites of injury.

Radiographic appearance

Low-density areas of edema and tissue necrosis

Treatment

Hospitalization

Medications

Intracerebral Hematoma

Traumatic hemorrhage into the brain parenchyma from shearing forces.

Injury to the intima of intracranial vessels can cause the development of traumatic aneurysms.

Intracerebral hematoma cont…

Radiographic appearance

Well-circumscribed, homogeneous, high density region that is usually surrounded by areas of low density edema.

Treatment

Evacuation of acute subdural hematomas.

Surgery if aneurysms

Subarachnoid hemorrhage

Injury to surface veins, cerebral parenchyma, or cortical arteries can produce bleeding into the ventricular system (blood on CSF)

Radiographic appearance

Increased density within the basilar cisterns, cerebral fissures, and sulci.

Treatment

Surgical evacuation and vessel repair if bleeding continues.

Less invasive methods are drug therapy and catheter placement.

Stroke

Neurological deficit due to lack of circulation to the brain.

CVA (cerebral vascular accident) - blood supply to a part of the brain is suddenly interrupted

Ischemic stroke – Complete occlusion
hemorrhage

TIA (Transient Ischemic attack) is a disturbance in brain function that lasts less than 1 hour and results from a temporary blockage of the brain's blood supply

Stroke cont…

Radiographic appearance

The purpose of a radiographic evaluation in the acute stroke patient is not to confirm the diagnosis of the stroke but rather exclude other processes that can simulate the clinical finding.

Initial appearance is a triangular or wedge shaped area of hypodensity.

Eventually produces a mass effect.

Brian tissue atrophies

Stroke cont…

Treatment

All stroke patients are placed on bed rest with reduced external stimuli to lower cerebral oxygen demands.

Medications to lower intracranial pressure

Anticoagulants (Heparin, Warfarin)

Multiple Sclerosis

A chronic progressive disorder that causes demyeliniation of the CNS.

Primarily involves the spinal cord, optic nerve, and central white matter of the brain.

Impairment of nerve conduction caused by degeneration of myelin sheaths.

Multiple Sclerosis cont…

Radiographic appearance

Scattered plaques of demyeliniation .

Treatment

Immunosuppressive agents may help limit the autoimmune attack.

Antiviral drugs may slow down the progress of the disease.

Can only aid in slowing progress. There is no cure.

Alzheimer’sDisease

Condition that causes cerebral atrophy, causing the patient to be confused, disorientated, and forgetful.

Alzhemiers cont…

Radiographic appearance

Cerebral atrophy, including symmetrical enlarged ventricles with prominence of the cortical sulci.

Treatment

Diet, education, memory aids may help slow the dementia but there is no cure.