Intraoperative imaging reveals spot sign with surgical correlate during early endoscopic ICH evacuation

Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is the most devastating form of stroke. Intraoperative imaging and management of intracavity bleeding during early endoscopic ICH evacuation may mitigate rebleeding, hematoma expansion, and neurological worsening. Here we document a case of intraoperative spot sign, detected in the angio suite using cone beam CT with contrast protocol, in a patient with spontaneous supratentorial ICH undergoing evacuation 13 hours after last known well. The spot sign was detected after endoscopic evaluation of the evacuated hematoma cavity demonstrated sufficient hemostasis, but before completion of the case and skin closure, prompting second-pass hematoma evacuation as well as identification and cauterization of the specific correlating bleeding vessel, resulting in near-complete evacuation of the hematoma.
Source: Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases - Category: Neurology Authors: Tags: Case Report Source Type: research