Gianna Fote, Hania Shahin, Nolan J Brown, Joseph Falcone, Alexander Lopez, Edward C Kuan, Frank P K Hsu, Michael Y Oh, Ahmed Mohyeldin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background and objectives: We present an illustrative case of spontaneous intracranial hypotension (SIH) in the setting of a suspected C1-2 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak that was successfully treated with muscle, collagen, and epidural blood patch. We examined the literature to identify similar cases reporting Cl-2 retrospinal fluid collections identified on imaging in the setting of SIH and quantified the success of targeted treatment to this area despite previous reports that caution about a "C1-2 false localizing sign."
Methods: A systematic search was performed identifying cases of SIH resulting from CSF leak with C1-2 fluid collection observed on imaging. PubMed, Google Scholar, and Web of Science were queried, and articles were screened for possible inclusion by 2 authors and supervised by the senior author.
Results: In total, 28 studies were included with a total of 32 patients. The number of patients in each study with C1-2 fluid collections, number of patients with fluid collections at multiple levels, specific intervention used, and outcomes of each intervention were recorded, with a focus on whether treatment occurred at the levels exhibiting fluid signal.
Conclusion: Although the C1-2 fluid signal in SIH has previously been described as a "false localizing sign," our study indicates that treating this level as the source of CSF leak results in successful and durable outcomes. Most SIH cases with signal at C1-2 did not have a fluid signal at any other level and were treated successfully and most commonly through epidural blood patch at the C1-2 level. Symptom resolution was also reported after direct repair of C1-2 CSF leaks through primary closure, Gelfoam patch, and muscle fragment with fibrin. In patients with SIH, C1-2 fluid signal, and no other source of CSF leak identified on imaging, surgical intervention at the C1-2 level seemed to have a high success rate.
期刊介绍:
Operative Neurosurgery is a bi-monthly, unique publication focusing exclusively on surgical technique and devices, providing practical, skill-enhancing guidance to its readers. Complementing the clinical and research studies published in Neurosurgery, Operative Neurosurgery brings the reader technical material that highlights operative procedures, anatomy, instrumentation, devices, and technology. Operative Neurosurgery is the practical resource for cutting-edge material that brings the surgeon the most up to date literature on operative practice and technique