Computed tomography permits reliable demonstration of the spinal canal and its contents. Measurements of the sagittal diameter of the bony canal do not take into consideration size, shape and state of intraspinal soft tissue structures, i.e. the thecal sac and its own contents, epidural fat and blood circulation pattern. Three particularly illustrative cases were selected in which obvious epidural venous engorgement was visualized in association with spinal stenosis. The authors think that epidural venous stasis occurring in segmental spinal stenosis is a CT sign of clinically significant narrowing of the neural canal. Accurate recognition of the type of lumbar stenosis together with epidural blood flow alterations permits a better understanding of the existing lesions. Thus, a more precise and specific surgical approach is possible.
A case is reported of an unusual foreign body, a pencil, penetrating the right temporal lobe through the squamous temporal bone in a fall. Wood has low attenuation coefficients, so that the appropriate CT examination includes multiple window settings to permit accurate assessment of bone fragment displacement as well as recognition of detached wood splinters. CT scanning and early surgery are important steps in the management of these injuries to reduce significantly the overall mortality as well as immediate and long term complications. The necessity for meticulous surgical technique when removing the foreign body is stressed as retained wood can not easily be visualized against the hypodense background due to postoperative changes.
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