| Literature DB >> 31143260 |
Sandhya Mangalore1,2, Srinivasa Rakshith3, Rangashetty Srinivasa4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) and normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) represent a cluster of typical clinical and imaging findings, with no evident etiological cause noted. In this study, we have proposed a model for IIH and NPH called Monroe-Kellie 3.0 (MK 3.0). IIH and NPH may be entities which represent opposite sides of the same coin with venous system and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) as core drivers for both these entities.Entities:
Keywords: Idiopathic intracranial hypertension; Monro–Kellie; normal pressure hydrocephalus
Year: 2019 PMID: 31143260 PMCID: PMC6516003 DOI: 10.4103/ajns.AJNS_252_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asian J Neurosurg
Figure 1(a) (i-iii) Examples of Monroe–Kellie with no obvious structural lesion and three possibilities of the compensatory dynamic principles applicable. (i) Monroe–Kellie 1.0: Role of acute increase of intracranial pressure by intracranial pathology resulting in compensatory volume changes of CSF and venous volumes to maintain intracranial pressure. For example: In encephalopathy there is diffuse brain swelling and mass effect. (ii) Monroe–Kellie 2.0: Role of acute increase of intracranial pressure by intra- or extra-cranial causes of increase in venous pressure resulting in raised intracranial pressure and causing cerebral perfusion pressure arterial changes and changes in cerebrospinal fluid volumes. (iii) The now proposed Monroe–Kellie 3.0: Role of chronic process of passive increase in venous pressure in idiopathic intracranial hypertension and mirror pathology of increased cerebrospinal fluid velocity in normal pressure hydrocephalus causing shear stress and strain on the brain. There is molding in the shape and also change in the pulsatility of brain secondary to mechanical stress. (b) (i-iii) Postulated model in normal intracranial pressure with figure in sag coronal and axial. Rectangle box indicates the skull. The brain vault is broadly divided into supra- and infra-tentorial compartment and based on skull shape into anterior, middle, and posterior cranial fossa. This knowledge of compartment is important to understand cerebrospinal fluid displacement within these compartments and also to understand the skull brain interfaces. A normal brain in the skull vault has an anteroinferior tilt with subarachnoid spaces uniform around the brain parenchyma. The brain normally floats in the cerebrospinal fluid within the skull which has a fixed volume and follows a Monroe–Kelle hypothesis for equilibrium between different compartments. Normal pulsating brain reflects pulsations from the heart and as such no active pump is available in the brain, and hence the outflow of veins and cerebrospinal fluid is passive with outflow based on the displacement of extra fluid in a closed space (Monroe–Kellie model). Normal venous and cerebrospinal fluid circulation in the brain is indicated. (i) SSagittal plane image: anterior commissure is slightly inferiorly angulated as compared to posterior commissure. (ii) Axial image: The lines in the parenchyma indicate the antegrade drainage of venous blood to cerebral veins (via transmedullary veins) and the passive antegrade movement of cerebrospinal fluid (via glylymphatic system and perivascular spaces). Bidirectional arrows indicate the maintenance of equilibrium in venous and cerebrospinal fluid compartments. (iii) Coronal image: The coronal image broadly divides into supra- and infra-tentorium, with posterior fossa well above the foramen magnum and the cerebrospinal fluid flow within the craniospinal axis. (c) Monroe–Kellie model and normal venous and cerebrospinal fluid circulation
Figure 2(a) (i-v) The scatter plot of the gray matter, white matter, and cerebrospinal fluid volumes along with intracerebral volume and total brain volume. X-axis represents the age and Y-axis represents the volumes. The volume after voxel-based morphometry analyses of T1 data is similar in all the three groups with an incidence of idiopathic intracranial hypertension more in the younger age group (C1: Gray matter volume, C2: white matter volume, C3: cerebrospinal fluid volume, C1+C2: intracerebral volume, C1+C2+C3: total brain volume). (b) (i) Morphological evaluation of the segmented data in the control, idiopathic intracranial hypertension, and normal pressure hydrocephalus cases. Fused gray matter, white matter, and cerebrospinal fluid segmented images of single patient. Yellow: white matter, red: gray matter, and blue: cerebrospinal fluid. No normalization of shape or intensity was carried out. (ii-iv) Segmented (ii) gray matter, (iii) white matter, and (iv) cerebrospinal fluid data to look for any morphological changes in normal controls, idiopathic intracranial hypertension cases, and normal pressure hydrocephalus cases
Figure 3(a) (i-iv) Whole-brain analysis findings in normal controls, idiopathic intracranial hypertension cases, and normal pressure hydrocephalus cases. (i) cerebrospinal fluid segment giving a ventriculogram-like image: (I) normal shape of the brain, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension of the brain has a brachy appearance, (III) normal pressure hydrocephalus of the brain has a dolicho appearance in high-convexity cuts, (ii) Gray–white differentiation: (I) Idiopathic intracranial hypertension: gray–white differentiation increased due to venous congestion and white matter > gray matter appears hypointense, (II) normal pressure hydrocephalus: gray–white differentiation maintained, (iii) Pixel value at window level 131 and window width 156: (I) Idiopathic intracranial hypertension: gray–white differentiation, increased white matter appears hypointense with value 81, (II) normal gray–white differentiation: fluid-attenuated inversion recovery images: window level 131 and window width 156 with pixel value 131, (III) normal pressure hydrocephalus: gray–white differentiation maintained, but white matter appears more hyperintense with a value of 170, (iv) Polar opposite findings: (I) idiopathic intracranial hypertension thinned out ethmoid bone and remodeling of sella, (II/III) normal pressure hydrocephalus silver beaten- appearance of parietal bone on MRI and CT. (b) (i-iv) Cerebrospinal fluid segment at high convexity: (i) (I) normal, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension parietal convexity > high frontal subarachnoid space is prominent, (III) normal pressure hydrocephalus parietal convexity >> high frontal subarachnoid space is effaced (hallmark sign). (ii) cerebrospinal fluid segment at lateral ventricle level: Ratio of lateral ventricle and subarachnoid space: (I) normal ratio of lateral ventricle and subarachnoid space, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension: decreased size of both lateral ventricle and subarachnoid space, (III) normal pressure hydrocephalus: increased size of both lateral ventricle and subarachnoid space. Line of torque and subarachnoid space: (I) normal frontal and occipital subarachnoid space, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension: decreased size of prefrontal and occipital subarachnoid space, (III) normal pressure hydrocephalus: decreased size of prefrontal and occipital subarachnoid space (line of maximum torque at the ventricle level [refer model]). (iii) Cerebrospinal fluid segment: midcoronal view Sylvian fissure: (I) normal Sylvian fissure, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension slightly effaced out, (III) normal pressure hydrocephalus: prominent Sylvian fissure (hallmark sign). (iv) The temporal lobe configuration against the base of anterior cranial fossa in coronal plane is assessed: (I) normal temporal lobe with cerebrospinal fluid, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension: the subarachnoid space appears effaced with temporal lobe appearing mildly large in coronal plane, (III) normal pressure hydrocephalus: subarachnoid space and Sylvian fissure prominent with temporal lobe appearing flattened in the coronal plane. (c) (i-iii) White-matter segmented image showing the anatomy of (mid sagittal image) central structures: corpus callosum, brainstem, and cerebellar white matter. (i) Corpus callosum: the images are flipped horizontally (I-III) (I) normal pressure hydrocephalus, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension, (III) normal. (I) Normal pressure hydrocephalus: thinned out corpus callosum due to stretching of corpus callosum and the anterior commissure higher than posterior commissure, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension: increased thickness/density due to foreshortening of corpus callosum and posterior commissures appear inferior to anterior commissures. (III) Normal configuration and thickness of corpus callosum and the anterior and posterior commissure relation. (ii) The corpus callosum shape: (I) idiopathic intracranial hypertension: waviness of the outer surface of corpus callosum and is directed downward, (II) normal pressure hydrocephalus: waviness of the inner surface of corpus callosum and is directed upward. (iii) Callosal angle coronal: (I) normal, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension maintained but have an elongated profile, (III) normal pressure hydrocephalus ballooned out and reduced angle. (d) (i-iii) Tentorium and venous sinus (i and ii) T2 sagittal and (ii) post contrast: (I) Normal tentorium length position along the venous sinus (shown as a green line parallel to straight sinus, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension: tentorium stretched with a downward angulation and appears to have prominent venous sinus, (III) normal pressure hydrocephalus tentorium stretched and appears to have downward angulation with normal sinus diameter (iii) in a case of idiopathic intracranial hypertension, (I) magnetic resonance venography (II and III) postcontrast image showing a large arachnoid granulation in the transverse sinus
Figure 4(a) (i-iii) Sella and parenchymal changes: (i) Empty sella in (I) idiopathic intracranial hypertension and (II) normal pressure hydrocephalus. (i and iii) Periventricular white matter hyperintensities at corona radiata, lateral ventricle, and sagittal sections; (ii) parenchymal changes at idiopathic intracranial hypertension. Idiopathic intracranial hypertension has more lateral and subcortical hyperintensity; (iii) parenchymal changes in normal pressure hydrocephalus. Normal pressure hydrocephalus has more periventricular white matter hyperintensity. These changes may act as an indirect marker of transmantle pressure resulting in the change of glylymphatic flow and related white-matter changes. (b) (i-iv) Infratentorial changes on magnetic resonance imaging: (i) Brainstem in (I) normal pressure hydrocephalus, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension, (III) normal on white-matter segmented data: (I) Normal pressure hydrocephalus cervicomedullary angle and pontomesencephalic angle have an obtuse configuration and normal-to-increased mamillopontine distance, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension: cervicomedullary angle: the pontomesencephalic angle is lost and in line with normal-to-decreased mamillopontine distance. (III) Normal configuration of cervicomedullary angle and maintained mamillopontine distance. (ii) Magnetic resonance imaging mid-sagittal view in idiopathic intracranial hypertension and normal pressure hydrocephalus brainstem configuration. (iii) In this ventriculogram-like image the cerebellar configuration and cisterns around it were assessed in. (I) Normal pressure hydrocephalus, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension, (III) controls. (I) Normal pressure hydrocephalus cerebellum appears buckled upward by cisterns around with clockwise upward rotation of cerebellum, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension cerebellum elongated appearance in sag orientation with counterclockwise rotation of cerebellum, (III) normal position of cerebellum. (iv) Ventriculogram-like picture: prepontine cistern and IV ventricle. (I) normal, (II) idiopathic intracranial hypertension of prepontine cistern narrow with small IV ventricle, (III) normal pressure hydrocephalus of prepontine cistern and IV ventricle appears prominent with flow void. (c) (i and ii) Other routes of cerebrospinal fluid drainage such as spinal nerve sheath along the craniospinal axis. (i) Normal pressure hydrocephalus: normal dimensions of SAS along the spinal nerve sheath noted associated with mild prominence of central canal as seen in sagittal and coronal view of cervical and lumbar spine (ii) idiopathic intracranial hypertension: the prominent spinal nerve sheath (ectasia in few cases) with normal dimensions of the central canal in sag and coronal view of cervical and lumbar spine. (c)(iii-v)Unconventional zones of drainage along the spinal and cranial nerve roots to extracranial lymph nodes in idiopathic intracranial hypertension and normal pressure hydrocephalus, (iii-v) (iii) periolfactory nerve sheath in idiopathic intracranial hypertension and normal pressure hydrocephalus and perioptic nerve sheath in idiopathic intracranial hypertension and normal pressure hydrocephalus, (iv) Internal auditory canal nerve sheath of 7–8 nerves in idiopathic intracranial hypertension and normal pressure hydrocephalus (coronal and axial sections) and (v) Meckels cave of V nerve in idiopathic intracranial hypertension and normal pressure hydrocephalus
Results of imaging findings
| Summary of the morphological changes in the brain in IIH and NPH | ||
|---|---|---|
| Controls | IIH | NPH |
| Whole brain | ||
| Volume of gray-white CSF | Similar distribution as controls of gray–white CSF and TBV and ICV | Similar distribution as controls of gray–white CSF and TBV and ICV |
| Shape of brain parenchyma | Brachy appearance | Dolicho appearance |
| Skull bone | Thinned-out ethmoid bone (CSF leak is known clinically) | Silver beaten appearance of the inner wall of the skull (parietal convexity) |
| High frontal and high parietal structures (convexity level) | High parietal >> high frontal SAS prominent | High parietal >> high frontal SAS effaced |
| Frontal and occipital SAS (lateral ventricle level) line of torque | Decreased size of SAS in prefrontal and occipital poles | Decreased size of SAS prefrontal and occipital poles |
| Ratio of lateral ventricle and SAS (lateral ventricle level) (axial and coronal views) | Decreased size of both lateral ventricle and SAS | Increased size of both lateral ventricle and SAS |
| Temporal lobe at the level of temporal horn of lateral ventricle | The SAS appears effaced, with TL appearing mildly prominent in the coronal plane (deformation of shape) | The SAS and Sylvian fissure prominent, with TL appearing flattened in the coronal plane (deformation of shape) |
| Corpus callosum shape and thickness (deformity assessment) | Corpus callosum: Pushed down/flattened profile and appears thick in sagittal profile | Corpus callosum pushed up and appears thinned out in sagittal plane |
| Calloso-septal angle | Maintained to increased angle but have an elongated profile | Ballooned out and reduced angle |
| Tentorium and venous sinus | Tentorium stretched and pushed down | Tentorium stretched and pushed down |
| Sella MCF | Empty sella | Empty sella |
| Parenchymal changes | Subcortical and deep white-matter hyperintensities | Periventricular hyperintensities and periventricular ooze (bulk water) with deep white-matter hyperintensities Prominent VR spaces |
| Brainstem | Mamillopontine profile | Mamillopontine profile |
| Cerebellum PCF | Cerebellum elongated appearance in sagittal orientation (tonsillar herniation is known). Sagittal plane cerebellum appears rotated counterclockwise as cerebellum is pushed down | Cerebellum appears buckled upward by cisterns around (cerebellar foliae and fissure appear prominent) |
| Prepontine cistern and IV ventricle | Narrow prepontine cisterns based on the degree of inferior shift, fourth ventricle appears small in dimensions | Prepontine cisterns prominent Cisterns, for example, mega cistern magna Reservoir Fourth ventricle appears en larged with prominent flow void |
| Craniospinal axis and spinal cord | IIH; the spinal nerve sheath prominent (ectasia in few cases) and a normal central canal | NPH; the spinal nerve sheath appears normal with mild prominence of central canal |
| Other zones of drainage/buffering areas (such as perineural sheath, perivascular spaces [VR spaces], cisterns, and subarachnoid spaces) | Prominent | Prominent |
CSF – Cerebrospinal fluid; TBV – Total brain volume; ICV – Intracerebral volume; FLAIR – Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery sequence; ACF – Anterior cranial fossa; MCF – Middle cranial fossa; VR – Virchow–Robin; PCF – Posterior cranial fossa; IIH – Idiopathic intracranial hypertension; NPH – Normal pressure hydrocephalus; SAS – Subarachnoid space; AC – Anterior commissure; PC – Posterior commissure; CC – Corpus callosum; TL – Temporal lobe
Summary of why idiopathic intracranial hypertension and normal pressure hydrocephalus are termed the same coin and different sides of the same coin
| Same coin | IIH and NPH | Variation |
|---|---|---|
| Idiopathic | No structural lesion but functional-level changes | Core drivers are different |
| LP drainage | Improvement in both | Additional venous stenting in IIH or shunting of CSF in NPH |
| Imaging | Empty sella and optic nerve sheath dilatation in both | Papillodema absent in NPH but present in IIH |
| Course clinically | Chronic progressive disorders with relapse and remission in both | Causative factors are different |
| Clinical features | Vague and varied with a wide spectrum of causes and presentation in both | |
| Model and core drivers | Increase venous pressure | Increased CSF velocity |
| Postulated model of brain shift which is in equilibrium with no pressure gradient in normal | ||
| Sagittal | Anteroinferior direction (exaggeration of normal tilt) | Posterosuperior direction shift |
| Coronal | Features of centrifugal gradient and SAS-effaced Herniation features | Features of centripetal gradient and SAS-enlarged reverse herniation features |
| Axial | Centrifugal pressure gradient | Centripetal pressure gradient |
| Clinical presentation | Cranial nerve involvement headache | PD like, gait, memory, etc. |
| Imaging | Juxta and deep WM changes | Periventricular and deep WM changes |
| Complication | Intracranial hypotension | Acute hydrocephalus |
CSF – Cerebrospinal fluid; IIH – Idiopathic intracranial hypertension; NPH – Normal pressure hydrocephalus; LP – Lumbar puncture; SAS – Subarachnoid space; WM – White matter
Figure 5(a) (i-iv) Postulated model in a case of idiopathic intracranial hypertension as supported by imaging findings. In a case of idiopathic intracranial hypertension, the possible mechanism is increased venous pressure in the venous sinus rather than venous velocity or volumes with differing distribution of venous pressure gradient based on anatomy. The midline structures such as corpus callosum, cerebrospinal fluid, and brainstem have more freedom of translation than the laterally placed structures such as temporal and frontal poles. Sigmoid sinus stenosis secondary to increased pressure, especially at the high convexity veins such as Superior saggital sinus , where the diameter is maximum, making the floating brain experience an exaggeration of the normal torsion in the anteroinferior direction with fulcrum in the midline. The brain parenchyma acts as a buffering zone to some extent, and the increased back pressure causes venous congestion in brain parenchyma. Brain shifts due to increased cerebral venous pressure causing secondary subarachnoid space cerebrospinal fluid redistribution within the various compartments as mentioned above. Increased stiffness of brain parenchyma may be due to both congestion and the shift. (i) Sagittal: representative image for the hypothesis in this case is that there is an exaggeration of the normal anteroinferior torsion of brain parenchyma in the skull in the sagittal plane, (ii) centrifugal pressure gradient transmitted from brain parenchyma to the surrounding due to venous congestion and venous back pressure as shown in axial images, (iii) coronal image: anterior and inferior (downward) torsion. Due to the net torsion in all planes brain is maximally squeezed in the prefrontal-occipital lobes plane along with venous congestion. Due to this brain shift in anterio inferior direction , there is paradoxical prominence of the high frontal and high parietal subarachnoid spaces, and due to impaired CSF absorption and increased back pressure transmitted to cerebrospinal fluid, structures in anterior cranial fossa, middle cranial fossa which act as secondary extracranial CSF draining sites such as sella and neural forminal sheath) are prominent. Posterior fossa structures also experience torque in the inferior direction. The transmantle pressure gradient is centrifugalin nature due to venous congestion and back pressure changes resulting in pressure dissipation both on the ventricular surface and the cortical margins. The pressure gradient is maximum on the subcortical location as the cortex gets pressed against the skull bone in the axial section at the level of ventricles. The brain is also remolded to have a brachy appearance. The push on the posterior fossa in the mid coronal image is represented with herniation inferiorly and effacement of subarachnoid space in the prefrontal and occipital regions and chinked appearance of lateral ventricle. Downward minor shifts are known with prominent subarachnoid space and cranial nerve sheath. Downward displacement of parenchyma through Kernohan's notch/transformaminal herniation can happen when it reaches a state of decompensation. (iv) Monroe–Kellie model and venous and cerebrospinal fluid circulation in idiopathic intracranial hypertension. The shape of the boxes has been maintained the same (as volumes are maintained the same ,unlike in other models of raised intracranial pressure where volumes of individual compartment change. (b) (i-iv) Postulated model in a case of normal pressure hydrocephalus supported by imaging findings. Sagittal, coronal, and axial: In a case of idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus, the possible mechanism is decreased cerebrospinal fluid absorption in the craniospinal axis leading to an increased cerebrospinal fluid velocity. The midline structures such as corpus callosum, cerebrospinal fluid, and brainstem have more freedom of translation than that of the laterally placed structures such as temporal and frontal poles. Increased velocity of cerebrospinal fluid and the retrograde flow cause a displacement of the floating brain, and it experiences a torsion in the posterior and superior directions. The brain parenchyma acts as a buffering zone for this, and the increased velocity of cerebrospinal fluid is redistributed in the brain tissue in differing gradients resulting in increased stiffness of brain parenchyma and secondary subarachnoid space effacement. (i) Sagittal: The representative image for the hypothesis in this case is that there is a posterosuperior torsion of brain parenchyma in the skull in the sagittal plane, (ii) Axial: centripetal pressure gradient transmitted from subarachnoid space and intraventricular cerebrospinal fluid to the brain parenchyma as shown in axial images (iii) coronal image torsion axis posterior and superior [upward]). Due to the net torsion in all planes brain is maximally squeezed in the prefrontal-occipital lobes plane. Due to the brain shift superiorly, the high parietal subarachnoid space is effaced. The cerebrospinal fluid in anterior cranial fossa and middle cranial fossa (sella and neural forminal sheath) is prominent due to passive displacement. Posterior fossa structures also experience torque in superior direction. The transmantle pressure gradient is centripetal in nature secondary to cerebrospinal fluid back pressure changes resulting in pressure dissipation on the subependymal surface and cortical surface. The periventricular space which contains white matter bundles has more elasticity than cortical gray matter. The brain is molded to have a long and narrow dolicho like appearance. The push on the posterior fossa in the midcoronal image is represented with reverse herniation superiorly and effacement of subarachnoid space in the prefrontal-occipital plane with prominent and dilated lateral ventricles. The subarachnoid space are prominent along cranial nerve sheath due to stagnation of CSF. (iv) Monroe–Kellie model and venous and cerebrospinal fluid circulation in normal pressure hydrocephalus. The shape of the boxes has been maintained the same unlike in other models of raised intracranial pressure where volumes of individual compartment change, as in this condition, volume is the same