AI Article Synopsis

  • Very low pressure hydrocephalus (VLPH) is a rare condition often leading to poor outcomes and can be resistant to treatment, particularly with cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage at low pressures.
  • The study reviewed four cases of VLPH to identify factors that could help determine the best treatment approach and aimed to avoid unnecessary prolonged external ventricular drainage in patients who likely wouldn't improve.
  • Findings suggest that improving Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) is linked to decreasing the frontal horn ratio and optimal CSF drainage, with good outcomes being dependent on brain viscoelasticity rather than mere fluid levels.

Article Abstract

 Unlike low-pressure hydrocephalus, very low pressure hydrocephalus (VLPH) is a rarely reported clinical entity previously described to be associated with poor outcomes and to be possibly refractory to treatment with continued cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage at subatmospheric pressures. We present four cases of VLPH following resection of suprasellar lesions and hypothesize that untreatable patients can be identified early, thereby avoiding futile prolonged external ventricular drainage in ICU.  We performed a retrospective chart review of four cases of VLPH encountered between 2007 and 2015 in two different institutions and practices and tried to identify factors contributing to successful treatment. We hypothesized that normalization of frontal horn ratio (FHR), optimization of volume of CSF drained, and avoidance of fluid shifts would contribute to improved Glasgow Coma Score (GCS). We examined fluid shifts by studying net fluids shifts and serum levels of sodium, urea, and creatinine. We used Pearson and Spearman correlations to identify measures that would correlate with improved GCS.  Our study reveals that improving GCS is positively correlated with decreased FHR and increased CSF drainage within an optimal range. The most important determinant of good outcome is retention of brain viscoelasticity as evidenced by restoration and maintenance of good GCS score despite fluctuations in FHR.  Futile prolonged subatmospheric drainage can be avoided by declining to continue treatment in patients who have permanently altered brain compliance secondary to unsealed CSF leaks, irremediable ventriculitis, and who are therefore unable to sustain an improved neurologic examination.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6043177PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0037-1609033DOI Listing

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