Case Report
A Case of Spontaneous Spinal Subdural Hematoma Complicated by Cranial Subarachnoid Hemorrhage and Spinal Adhesive Arachnoiditis
Figure 1
Sagittal (T1-weighted (a), T2-weighted (b), STIR (c), and contrast-enhanced (d)) and axial (T1-weighted (e), T2-weighted (f), and contrast-enhanced (g)) magnetic resonance imaging revealed a large subdural hematoma extending from T2 to L3 and compressing the spinal cord from the ventral side at 7 days after onset.
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