Herniation secondary to critical cerebrospinal fluid hypovolemia after supratentorial craniotomy: a single-center case series.

IF 2.7 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Neurological Sciences Pub Date : 2025-04-01 Epub Date: 2024-12-12 DOI:10.1007/s10072-024-07940-8
Shanwen Chen, Lu Wang, Quanli Kang
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Critical cerebrospinal fluid hypovolemia (CCSFH) is a rare postcraniotomy condition in patients with acute supratentorial brain injury, often mistaken for intracranial hypertension. This article aims to enhance awareness of CCSFH by describing its clinical and radiological characteristics.

Methods: Between January 2019 and November 2023, 330 consecutive patients with acute critical brain injury underwent supratentorial craniotomy. CCSFH diagnosis was based on three criteria: a decline in consciousness, head CT scans revealing midline shift of ≥ 5 mm, and rapid clinical or imaging presentation improvement within three days after implementing various treatments to increase CSF volume. Clinical and imaging features, treatment courses, and responses were analyzed. Midline shift on head CT scans was measured at four time points before and after surgery and compared using repeated measures ANOVA.

Results: Fifteen patients (4.5%) developed CCSFH within 1 to 13 days post-surgery. Of them, seven patients exhibited a decline in consciousness or mental status, with three presenting anisocoria. The remaining eight had normal pupil sizes, complicating consciousness assessment due to postoperative sedation and analgesia. The average midline shift was 10.84 ± 2.83 mm during the CCSFH presentation, which showed a statistically significant difference from the initial postoperative measurement (p = 0.005) but not from the preoperative measurement (p = 0.536). Intracranial pressure ranged from 1-11 mmHg in five cases. The first four cases underwent an unplanned decompressive craniectomy as their conditions progressed to severe cingulate or transtentorial herniation, attributable to unawareness of cerebrospinal fluid hypovolemia before the second surgery. Drawing from the accumulated experiences, the subsequent eleven cases of CCSFH were promptly identified upon onset, and appropriate treatments were administered, with the supine position serving as the primary intervention modality. The CCSFH condition was successfully reversed in all patients.

Conclusions: CCSFH after craniotomy should be considered, and prompt identification and intervention are required in cases of clinical deterioration. The primary management strategy is placing the patient supine, along with stopping cerebrospinal fluid drainage, halting hyperosmotic diuretics, and administering intravenous hydration, often leading to favorable outcomes.

幕上开颅术后严重脑脊液低容量继发疝:单中心病例系列。
背景:重症脑脊液低容量血症(CCSFH)是急性幕上脑损伤患者开颅后罕见的症状,常被误认为颅内高压。本文旨在通过描述其临床和放射学特征来提高对CCSFH的认识。方法:2019年1月至2023年11月,连续330例急性重症脑损伤患者行幕上开颅术。CCSFH的诊断基于三个标准:意识下降,头部CT扫描显示中线移位≥5mm,在实施各种增加脑脊液容量的治疗后三天内临床或影像学表现迅速改善。分析临床及影像学特征、疗程及疗效。在手术前后的四个时间点测量头部CT扫描的中线偏移,并使用重复测量方差分析进行比较。结果:15例患者(4.5%)在术后1 ~ 13天内发生CCSFH。其中,7名患者表现出意识或精神状态下降,3名患者表现出异视。其余8例瞳孔大小正常,由于术后镇静和镇痛使意识评估复杂化。CCSFH表现期间的平均中线位移为10.84±2.83 mm,与术后初始测量值(p = 0.005)有统计学差异,但与术前测量值无统计学差异(p = 0.536)。5例颅内压1 ~ 11mmhg。由于第二次手术前未意识到脑脊液低容量,前四例患者病情发展为严重的扣带或幕前疝,因此进行了计划外的颅骨减压切除术。根据积累的经验,随后的11例CCSFH患者在发病时被及时识别,并给予适当的治疗,以仰卧位为主要干预方式。所有患者的CCSFH均成功逆转。结论:应考虑开颅后发生CCSFH,临床恶化时应及时识别并干预。主要的治疗策略是使患者仰卧,同时停止脑脊液引流,停用高渗利尿剂,并给予静脉补液,通常会导致良好的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neurological Sciences
Neurological Sciences 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
3.00%
发文量
743
审稿时长
4 months
期刊介绍: Neurological Sciences is intended to provide a medium for the communication of results and ideas in the field of neuroscience. The journal welcomes contributions in both the basic and clinical aspects of the neurosciences. The official language of the journal is English. Reports are published in the form of original articles, short communications, editorials, reviews and letters to the editor. Original articles present the results of experimental or clinical studies in the neurosciences, while short communications are succinct reports permitting the rapid publication of novel results. Original contributions may be submitted for the special sections History of Neurology, Health Care and Neurological Digressions - a forum for cultural topics related to the neurosciences. The journal also publishes correspondence book reviews, meeting reports and announcements.
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