| Literature DB >> 31156540 |
Raghunath Avanali1, M S Gopalakrishnan2, B Indira Devi3,4, Dhananjaya I Bhat3, Dhaval P Shukla3, Nagesh C Shanbhag3.
Abstract
Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) is a relatively uncommon cause of stroke more often affecting women and younger individuals. Blockage of the venous outflow rapidly causes edema and space-occupying venous infarctions and it seems intuitive that decompressive craniectomy (DC) can effectively reduce intracranial pressure just like it works for malignant middle cerebral artery infarcts and traumatic brain injury. But because of the relative rarity of this type of stroke, strong evidence from randomized controlled trials that DC is a life-saving procedure is not available unlike in the latter two conditions. There is a possibility that other forms of interventions like endovascular recanalization, thrombectomy, thrombolysis, and anticoagulation, which cannot be used in established middle cerebral artery infarcts and TBI, can reverse the ongoing pathology of increasing edema in CVST. Such interventions, although presently unproven, could theoretically obviate the need for DC when used in early stages. However, in the absence of such evidence, we recommend that DC be considered early as a life-saving measure whenever there are large hemorrhagic infarcts, expanding edema, radiological, and clinical features of impending herniation. This review gives an overview of the etiology and risk factors of CVST in different patient populations and examines the effectiveness of DC and other forms of interventions.Entities:
Keywords: anticoagulation; cerebral venous sinus thrombosis; decompressive craniectomy; outcome; risk factors
Year: 2019 PMID: 31156540 PMCID: PMC6529953 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.00511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST). (A) Computed tomography depicts a confluence of blotchy areas of bleed typically seen in hemorrhagic CVST with mass effect. (B) Day 1, and (C) 8 months, post decompressive craniectomy. (D) Flowchart outlining the management of CVST. CT, computed tomography; ICU, intensive care unit. GCS, Glasgow coma scale; ICP, intracranial pressure.
Major studies evaluating the role of decompressive craniectomy in cerebral venous sinus thrombosis published after the systematic review in 2011.
| Ferro et al. ( | Systematic review, multicentric registry and review | 69 | 1998–2010 | NA | Large hemispheric lesions and poor GCS | 14.5 | 11 died. 39 patients recovered to mRS7 score 0 1 or 2. | Recommend DC |
| Vivakaran et al. ( | Retrospective single center study | 34 | 2006–2008 | 8.3 | Clinical deterioration, Herniation syndrome | 11.7 | Four died. 14 recovered patients with GOS five | Recommend DC |
| Aaron et al. ( | Retrospective single center study | 44 | 2002–2011 | NA | Volume of lesion and midline shift | 25.5 | Nine died. Three lost to follow up. Twenty seven patients had mRS core 0, 1 or 2 | Recommend DC |
| Soyer et al. ( | Retrospective single center study | 16 | 2002–2005 | NA | Clinical deterioration. ICP monitoring was used in 8 patients | 28 | Five died during hospital stay. A detailed outcome assessment in treatment groups was lacking | For a similar CVST severity, craniectomy did not improve the outcome |
| Zhang et al. ( | Retrospective single center study | 58 | 2005–2015 | 6.7 | Clinical deterioration, Herniation syndrome | 6 | Eight died. Thirty three patients attained a favorable outcome (mRS score of 0 in three patients, score of 1 in 13, and score of 2 in 17) | Recommend DC |
| Venkateswaran et al. ( | Prospective cohort study | 17 | 2015–2016 | 9 (median) | Clinical deterioration midline shift | 18.6 | One died. Two lost follow ups. Median mRS score of 1.5 in 14 patients | Improvement in regional cerebral oxygen saturation with DC |
Only studies with a number of decompressive craniectomies more than 15 were selected.
N stands for the total number of patients who underwent DC.
Only the predominant reasons for DC are given in the table.
Number of patients in the registry were 38, and 31 in Review: 45 patients underwent DC and the rest underwent other procedures.
Total cases in the study were 47. DC, decompressive craniectomy; mRS, modifed Rankin score; CVST, cerebral venous sinus thrombosis.
Summary of various treatment modalities for CVST.
| Anticoagulation | Intravenous | The first line of treatment for CVST. |
| Fibrinolysis | Intravenous /Endovascular | Small case series and prospective studies without a control group are available. |
| Thrombectomy | Endovascular | Only a limited number of studies published. |
| Surgical intervention(s) | Open surgical thrombectomy | Few published case reports. With increasing access to endovascular modalities, microsurgical removal of thrombus is probably not indicated. |
| Decompressive craniectomy | Class IIb; Level C Evidence. Indications include: |
CVST, cerebral venous sinus thrombosis; ICP, intracranial pressure.