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Magnetic resonance imaging-based detection of retinal hemorrhages in a multicenter cohort of abusive head trauma.

Pediatric radiology

Authors: Maria Hahnemann, Bernd Karger, Sibylle Banaschak, Hans-Joachim Mentzel, Alexander Radbruch, Daniel Wittschieber

BACKGROUND: In pediatric abusive head trauma (AHT), retinal hemorrhages are a key diagnostic feature. Detection by fundoscopy may be delayed or limited, whereas magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) enables non-invasive, objective assessment on routine brain sequences.

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the diagnostic utility of different MRI sequences-particularly susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI), T2*-weighted (T2*w), and morphological sequences-in detecting retinal hemorrhages in AHT.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this retrospective multicenter study (2006-2015), 57 well-documented AHT cases from three German institutions were analyzed. A subgroup consisted of "confession cases." MRI scans were reviewed for retinal hemorrhages across SWI, T2*w, T1-weighted, T2-weighted (T2w), and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) sequences by blinded expert readers. Fundoscopy results served as the gold standard. Sensitivities were calculated for each sequence, and "confession" versus "non-confession" cases were compared.

RESULTS: Fundoscopy detected retinal hemorrhages in 44 of 56 evaluable cases (78.6%). MRI identified retinal hemorrhages most frequently on gradient recalled echo sequences, with SWI showing higher sensitivity compared to T2*w (76.9% vs. 47.8%). T2w imaging showed markedly lower sensitivity (30.3%) but detected retinal hemorrhages on one eye missed on T2*w imaging in two cases. In three cases, MRI detected retinal hemorrhages not reported on fundoscopy. No statistically significant differences were found between "confession" and "non-confession" cases across all parameters considered (P>0.05).

CONCLUSION: MRI-particularly SWI and, to a lesser extent, T2*w imaging-may offer a useful tool of detecting retinal hemorrhages in AHT when fundoscopy is limited. T2w imaging may provide complementary information in selected cases.

© 2026. The Author(s).

PMID: 41779150

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