Objective: Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) sagging brain syndrome is a disabling condition. An underlying spinal Cerebrospinal fluid leak can be identified in only a minority of patients and the success rate of non-directed treatments is low. Some of these patients have a remote history of craniectomy/cranioplasty and we report a positive response to custom implant cranioplasty revision many years after their initial cranioplasty.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Purpose: Spinal CSF leaks cause spontaneous intracranial hypotension. Several types of leaks have been identified, and one of these types is the lateral dural tear. Performing myelography with the patient in the decubitus position allows precise characterization of these leaks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak developed in a 14-year-old girl and a 12-year-old boy following a diagnostic lumbar puncture. Two days and sixteen years later, respectively, paraplegia developed due to a functional disorder. Imaging revealed an extensive extradural CSF collection in both patients and digital subtraction myelography was required to pinpoint the exact site of a ventral dural puncture hole where the lumbar spinal needle had gone "through and through" the dural sac.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Purpose: Spontaneous spinal CSF leaks typically cause orthostatic headache, but their detection may require specialized and invasive spinal imaging. We undertook a study to determine the value of simple optic nerve sheath MR imaging measurements in predicting the likelihood of finding a CSF-venous fistula, a type of leak that cannot be detected with routine spine MR imaging or CT myelography, among patients with orthostatic headache and normal conventional brain and spine imaging findings.
Materials And Methods: This cohort study included a consecutive group of patients with orthostatic headache and normal conventional brain and spine imaging findings who underwent digital subtraction myelography under general anesthesia to look for spinal CSF-venous fistulas.
Background: Postoperative spinal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leaks are common but rarely cause extensive CSF collections that require specialized imaging to detect the site of the dural breach.
Objective: To investigate the use of digital subtraction myelography (DSM) for patients with extensive extradural CSF collections after spine surgery.
Methods: A retrospective review was performed to identify a consecutive group of patients with extensive postoperative spinal CSF leaks who underwent DSM.