## Correct Answer: C. Subarachnoid hemorrhage Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) presents with the classic triad of neck stiffness, severe headache, and photophobia—the patient's presentation is pathognomonic. On CT imaging, SAH shows characteristic **hyperdense (white) blood in the subarachnoid space**, particularly in the basal cisterns, sylvian fissures, and around the circle of Willis. This distribution reflects blood tracking through the cerebrospinal fluid pathways following rupture of an intracranial aneurysm (most commonly anterior communicating artery in Indian populations). The acute onset of "thunderclap" headache with meningeal irritation signs (neck stiffness) is the clinical hallmark. CT is the gold standard first-line imaging in acute SAH—sensitivity >95% within 6 hours of onset. The hyperdense appearance in the subarachnoid compartment (not within brain parenchyma, not in ventricles alone) is the discriminating radiological finding. Lumbar puncture would show xanthochromia if CT is negative and clinical suspicion remains high, but CT findings here are diagnostic. SAH carries high mortality (30–50% in India) and requires urgent neurosurgical intervention for aneurysm securing. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Meningitis** — While meningitis also causes neck stiffness and headache, CT imaging in bacterial meningitis shows **normal or only cerebral edema**—there is no hyperdense blood in the subarachnoid space. Meningitis is a clinical diagnosis; CT is performed to rule out mass lesions before LP. The presence of hyperdense material in subarachnoid cisterns on CT is not a feature of meningitis and points away from this diagnosis. NBE may pair meningitis with neck stiffness to trap students who rely on clinical signs alone without integrating imaging findings. **B. Hemorrhagic stroke** — Hemorrhagic stroke (intracerebral hemorrhage) shows **hyperdense blood within the brain parenchyma itself**, not in the subarachnoid space. The distribution is intraparenchymal (basal ganglia, thalamus, pons, cerebellum) rather than in cisterns and fissures. Hemorrhagic stroke typically presents with focal neurological deficits (hemiparesis, aphasia) rather than the meningeal irritation signs (neck stiffness) seen in SAH. The imaging location—subarachnoid vs. parenchymal—is the key discriminator. **D. Intraparenchymal hemorrhage** — Intraparenchymal hemorrhage is blood within the brain tissue itself, appearing as a hyperdense lesion surrounded by edema in the gray or white matter. SAH, by definition, is bleeding into the subarachnoid space (between arachnoid and pia mater), which appears as hyperdensity in cisterns, fissures, and sulci—not within the brain substance. The clinical presentation of SAH with meningeal signs (neck stiffness) is also distinct from the focal deficits typical of intraparenchymal bleeds. ## High-Yield Facts - **Hyperdense blood in subarachnoid cisterns and sylvian fissures on CT** is the pathognomonic imaging finding in acute SAH. - **Thunderclap headache + neck stiffness + photophobia** = meningeal irritation syndrome in SAH; onset is sudden and maximal at presentation. - **Anterior communicating artery aneurysm** is the most common source of SAH in Indian populations (30–35% of cases). - **CT sensitivity >95% within 6 hours** of SAH onset; sensitivity drops to ~50% by day 5 as blood density decreases—LP with xanthochromia becomes diagnostic after this window. - **Rebleeding risk peaks at 24–48 hours** post-initial hemorrhage; urgent angiography and neurosurgical intervention (clipping or coiling) are indicated. ## Mnemonics **SAH Imaging Pearl: 'CISTERNS'** **C**isterns (basal, suprasellar) | **I**nterhem (interhemispheric fissure) | **S**ylvian fissures | **T**hunder (thunderclap onset) | **E**arly CT (gold standard) | **R**upture (aneurysm) | **N**eck stiffness (meningeal sign) | **S**ubarachnoid space (location). Use this to recall where SAH blood appears on imaging and the clinical context. **Bleed Location Discriminator: 'SIPS'** **S**ubarachnoid = cisterns/fissures (SAH) | **I**ntraparenchymal = brain tissue (ICH) | **P**arenchymal = gray/white matter (ICH) | **S**ubdural = between dura & arachnoid (SDH). Quick way to map imaging findings to anatomical compartments. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs meningitis with neck stiffness to lure students into choosing meningitis without carefully examining the CT findings. The key trap: both SAH and meningitis cause meningeal irritation signs, but only SAH shows hyperdense blood in the subarachnoid space on CT—integration of imaging with clinical presentation is essential. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian emergency departments, a patient presenting with sudden-onset severe headache and neck stiffness should trigger immediate non-contrast CT head. If CT is negative but clinical suspicion remains high (e.g., delayed presentation >5 days), lumbar puncture showing xanthochromia confirms SAH. Early recognition and transfer to a neurosurgery center for aneurysm securing significantly improves outcomes and reduces rebleeding mortality. _Reference: Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease, Ch. 28 (Central Nervous System); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Ch. 445 (Stroke); Guyton & Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, Ch. 61 (Cerebral Blood Flow)_
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