Intramuscular Hematoma on the Psoas Muscle.
Jun Gue SeoJoo Chul YangTae Wan KimKwan Ho ParkPublished in: Korean journal of neurotrauma (2019)
Intramuscular hematomas on the psoas muscle are rare and usually occur as a result of trauma, iatrogenic etiology during lumbar surgery, rupture of the aortic aneurysm, and hematologic diseases. The incidence of spontaneous psoas muscle hematomas has slowly increased as a result of using anticoagulation and antiplatelet agents. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging is a more sensitive option compared to computed tomography (CT) when diagnosing a hematoma. Coronal T2-weighted images are more useful. CT imaging is also useful to establish the rapid diagnosis of hematoma. When a prolonged prothrombin time and international normalized ratio and decrease platelet count are noted, psoas muscle hematomas should be considered, if there was no lesion in the spinal canal. Most hematomas resolve spontaneously without clinical complications if the hematoma is not large or it is not compressing the surrounding important structures, irrespective of cause.
Keyphrases
- contrast enhanced
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance
- skeletal muscle
- minimally invasive
- dual energy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- image quality
- positron emission tomography
- high resolution
- aortic aneurysm
- risk factors
- spinal cord
- atrial fibrillation
- deep learning
- acute coronary syndrome
- convolutional neural network
- optical coherence tomography
- coronary artery disease
- photodynamic therapy
- venous thromboembolism
- spinal cord injury
- pet ct