Marcelo Duarte Vilela1. 1. Department of Neurological Surgery, Harborview Medical Center, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98104, USA. mdvilela@u.washington.edu
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Paradoxical herniation can occur as a complication of lumbar puncture in patients who had a decompressive craniectomy. The supposed mechanism is the development of a negative pressure gradient that allows the brain to shift toward the infratentorial space with subsequent herniation. Trendelenburg position plus early cranioplasty has been the suggested treatment to eliminate the gradient. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 53-year-old woman had a decompressive hemicraniectomy for SAH-related swelling. A lumbar puncture was performed on postoperative day 5 to rule out infection. She remained neurologically stable until 6 weeks later, when she deteriorated because of a paradoxical herniation. Head positioning and cranioplasty were only temporarily helpful. She developed a second episode of decline a few days later due to an extraaxial CSF collection. A lumbar blood patch plus drainage of the collection successfully allowed full neurologic recovery. CONCLUSIONS: Cranioplasty and head positioning alone might not be sufficient to eliminate the negative pressure gradient. A blood patch should be part of the management of paradoxical herniation.
BACKGROUND: Paradoxical herniation can occur as a complication of lumbar puncture in patients who had a decompressive craniectomy. The supposed mechanism is the development of a negative pressure gradient that allows the brain to shift toward the infratentorial space with subsequent herniation. Trendelenburg position plus early cranioplasty has been the suggested treatment to eliminate the gradient. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 53-year-old woman had a decompressive hemicraniectomy for SAH-related swelling. A lumbar puncture was performed on postoperative day 5 to rule out infection. She remained neurologically stable until 6 weeks later, when she deteriorated because of a paradoxical herniation. Head positioning and cranioplasty were only temporarily helpful. She developed a second episode of decline a few days later due to an extraaxial CSF collection. A lumbar blood patch plus drainage of the collection successfully allowed full neurologic recovery. CONCLUSIONS: Cranioplasty and head positioning alone might not be sufficient to eliminate the negative pressure gradient. A blood patch should be part of the management of paradoxical herniation.
Authors: Lana Vasung; Marion Hamard; Maria Carmen Alcaraz Soto; Samuel Sommaruga; Lukas Sveikata; Beatrice Leemann; Maria Isabel Vargas Journal: Neuroradiology Date: 2016-02-23 Impact factor: 2.804