Spinal Epidural Hematoma (SEH)
A Spinal Epidural Hematoma (SEH) is a rare but potentially devastating condition characterized by bleeding into the epidural space of the spinal canal, which may compress the spinal cord or cauda equina and cause neurological deficits.
π§ Definition
A SEH is the accumulation of blood between the dura mater and the vertebral periosteum, which can lead to spinal cord or nerve root compression.
π Epidemiology
- Incidence: ~0.1 per 100,000 per year
- Slight male predominance
- Can occur at any age; more common in middle-aged to elderly adults
- Most common locations: cervical and thoracic spine
π Classification of Spinal Epidural Hematoma (SEH)
SEH can be classified based on etiology, location, clinical evolution, and imaging features:
π By Etiology
- Spontaneous:
- Idiopathic
- Associated with anticoagulation, coagulopathies, vascular malformations
- Traumatic:
- Spinal fractures
- Sports injuries
- Iatrogenic:
- Post-lumbar puncture
- Epidural catheterization or anesthesia
- Secondary to pathology:
- Tumors (vascular-rich neoplasms)
- Infections (rare)
π By Location
- Cervical SEH
- Lumbar SEH
- Sacral SEH
- Multilevel SEH (extends across >1 region)
π By Time of Evolution (Radiological Ageing on MRI)
- Hyperacute (<24 h): Iso-/hyperintense on T2, iso-/hypointense on T1
- Acute (1β3 days): Variable T1/T2 signals, possible cord compression
- Subacute (3β7 days): Hyperintense on both T1 and T2
- Chronic (>7 days): Capsule formation, heterogeneous signal, hemosiderin
π By Clinical Evolution
- Stable SEH: Neurological symptoms non-progressive or improving
- Progressive SEH: Worsening neurological deficits
- Relapsing/Rebleeding SEH: Rare; typically in coagulopathy or vascular lesion
π By Extension on MRI
- Focal (<2 vertebral levels)
- Extensive (β₯2 vertebral levels)
- Circumferential vs. Unilateral/Dorsal/Ventral hematomas
π§ Clinical Utility
- Guides urgency of treatment (e.g. progressive vs. stable)
- Helps in choosing between surgical vs. conservative management
- Useful for prognosis and monitoring recurrence risk
β οΈ Etiology / Risk Factors
- Spontaneous (idiopathic in 40β60% of cases)
- Anticoagulant therapy (warfarin, DOACs)
- Trauma (including minor)
- Iatrogenic (epidural catheter, spinal tap)
- Coagulopathies
- Vascular malformations
- Neoplasms or infection (rare)
π Clinical Presentation
- Acute severe back or neck pain
- Rapidly progressive neurological symptoms:
- Weakness or paralysis
- Sensory level
- Bowel/bladder dysfunction
- May mimic stroke, cauda equina syndrome, or transverse myelitis
π§ͺ Diagnosis
- MRI spine with gadolinium: gold standard
- Hyperacute (<24h): isointense on T1, hyperintense on T2
- Subacute: becomes hyperintense on T1 and T2
- CT myelogram: alternative if MRI unavailable
- Coagulation profile, CBC
βοΈ Management
- Emergency decompressive surgery (laminectomy or hemilaminectomy)
- Especially if progressive or severe deficits
- Conservative management:
- Considered only if mild and improving symptoms
- Correct underlying coagulopathy
- Steroid use: controversial
π Prognosis
- Strongly depends on:
- Time to surgery (ideally <12 hours)
- Severity of preoperative neurological impairment
- Early diagnosis and treatment β favorable outcomes
π Notes
- Must be considered in differential diagnosis of acute spinal cord compression
- Prompt MRI and surgical referral are crucial
- Anticoagulated patients with new back pain require urgent evaluation