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Interpretation of NCCT head: Normal findings

History:

In 1972, Sir Godfrey Hounsfield developed CT scan for which he was awarded Nobel prize in 1979. Through these years CT has come from one rotation in 6 minutes to one in 0.33 seconds.

Principle:

X rays are produced by CT machine, which are absorbed by different tissues in different degrees. CT machine has Xray source and detectors which are 180 degrees around each other and move 360 degrees around the patient.

Hounsfield units of different tissues:

Windowing:

Bone window (only skull bone is seen with no brain parenchymal components)

Slice thickness: may vary; we generally get a slice thickness of 5 mm to 10 mm for a routine head CT.

Parenchyma and densities:

Artefacts:

A. Beam hardening is seen between the petrous apices, limiting evaluation of the pons. 
B. Aneurysm clip metal artifact.
C. Partial volume artifact is seen as streaks throughout the posterior fossa on this 5-mm thick slice.
D. Reducing slice thickness to 2.5 mm significantly reduces partial volume artifact
Motion artifact
ring artifact

Different views:

A = Axial, B = Coronal, C = Sagittal

Orientation:

Skull bones and sutures:

Diagrammatic representation of bones and sutures are shown below.

Cranial fossa:

Landmarks are 2 bones –

Sinuses in CT head (bone window):

5 sinuses in the picture below:

The meninges:

CSF spaces: 

How to find the central sulcus?

Falx cerebri:

Falx and tentorium:

Fissures:

Ventricles of brain:

Basal ganglia and thalamus:

Internal capsules:

Dural venous sinuses:

All of them cannot be appreciated in the CT. We will need MRV for appreciation of all the sinuses. Some of them which are seen is shown below.

Note: this article reviews the normal CT findings. We will have the next article that will show some abnormal CT scans.

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