AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed the effectiveness of endoscopic aqueductoplasty, with or without stent placement, in treating isolated fourth ventricle (IFV) in seven children with loculated hydrocephalus resulting from hemorrhage or infection.
  • All patients had previously implanted supratentorial shunts, and the procedure led to resolution of intracranial hypertension symptoms and improvement in neuroimaging results, particularly with stent placement in cases experiencing membranous aqueductal stenosis.
  • The findings suggest that combining aqueductoplasty with stent placement is more effective at preventing aqueduct occlusion and should be considered the first-line treatment when anatomy allows.

Article Abstract

Object: In this study the authors conducted a retrospective evaluation of the effectiveness of endoscopic aqueductoplasty, performed alone or accompanied by placement of a stent, in the treatment of an isolated fourth ventricle (IFV) in seven patients afflicted with loculated hydrocephalus after a hemorrhage or infection.

Methods: Seven children with symptomatic IFV and membranous aqueductal stenosis underwent endoscopic aqueductoplasty alone or combined with placement of a stent in the cerebral aqueduct. The mean age of the patients at the time of surgery was 10 months. The mean duration of follow up was 26 months. In all patients a supratentorial shunt had already been implanted, and in five patients neuroendoscopy had already been performed because other isolated compartments had been present inside the ventricular system. Aqueductoplasty alone was performed in three patients and aqueductoplasty and aqueductal stent placement in four. A precoronal approach was performed in five patients and a suboccipital approach in two. Signs and symptoms of intracranial hypertension resolved in all cases. Stent placement was successful in all five cases, resulting in clinical and neuroimaging-confirmed improvements in the IFV. Restenosis of the aqueduct occurred in two patients in whom stents had not been placed. In one of these patients restenosis was managed by an endoscopic procedure, during which the aqueduct was reopened and a stent implanted; in the other patient a shunt was placed in the fourth ventricle. Hydrocephalus was controlled by a single shunt in six cases (86%) and by a double shunt in one case.

Conclusions: Endoscopic placement of a stent in the aqueduct is more effective in preventing the repeated occlusion of the aqueduct than aqueductoplasty alone and should be indicated as the initial treatment in each case of compatible anatomy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/ped.2006.104.1.21DOI Listing

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