AI Article Synopsis

  • New research shows that problems with shunt drains can happen because they sometimes drain too much fluid due to gravity, which can lead to shunt failure.
  • The study looked at patients who had special devices added to their shunts that help control fluid flow, called antisiphon devices (ASDs), to see if they worked better.
  • Results showed that using ASDs helped reduce the chances of the shunts getting blocked by about 67% to 75%, meaning they might help make shunt systems work better in the long run.

Article Abstract

Objective: Recent evidence points to gravity-dependent chronic shunt overdrainage as a significant, if not leading, cause of proximal shunt failure. Yet, shunt overdrainage or siphoning persists despite innovations in valve technology. The authors examined the effectiveness of adding resistance to flow in shunt systems via antisiphon devices (ASDs) in preventing proximal shunt obstruction.

Methods: A retrospective observational cohort study was completed on patients who had an ASD (or additional valve) added to their shunt system between 2004 and 2016. Detailed clinical, radiographic, and surgical findings were examined. Shunt failure rates were compared before and after ASD addition.

Results: Seventy-eight patients with shunted hydrocephalus were treated with placement of an ASD several centimeters distal to the primary valve. The records of 12 of these patients were analyzed separately due to a complex shunt revision history (i.e., > 10 lifetime shunt revisions). The authors found that adding an ASD decreased the 1-year ventricular catheter obstruction rates in the "simple" and "complex" groups by 67.3% and 75.8%, respectively, and the 5-year rates by 43.3% and 65.6%, respectively. The main long-term ASD complication was ASD removal for presumed valve pressure intolerance in 5 patients.

Conclusions: Using an ASD may result in significant reductions in ventricular catheter shunt obstruction rates. If confirmed with prospective studies, this observation would lend further evidence that chronic shunt overdrainage is a central cause of shunt malfunction, and provide pilot data to establish clinical and laboratory studies that assess optimal ASD type, number, and position, and eventually develop shunt valve systems that are altogether resistant to siphoning.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/2019.6.PEDS1951DOI Listing

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