| Literature DB >> 31497081 |
Boon Seng Liew1, Kiyoshi Takagi2, Yoko Kato3, Shyam Duvuru4, Sengottuvel Thanapal5, Balamurugan Mangaleswaran6.
Abstract
Idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (iNPH) is one of the neurodegenerative diseases which can be treated surgically with favorable outcome. The gait disturbance, cognitive, and urinary symptoms are known as the clinical triad of iNPH. In this review, we have addressed the comorbidities, differential diagnoses, clinical presentations, and pathology of iNPH. We have also summarized the imaging studies and clinical procedures used for the diagnosis of iNPH. The treatment modality, outcomes, and prognosis were also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnostic methods; idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus; neuro-degenerative disease; surgical management
Year: 2019 PMID: 31497081 PMCID: PMC6703007 DOI: 10.4103/ajns.AJNS_14_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asian J Neurosurg
Clinical presentations of iNPH patients
| Symptom(s) | Frequency (%) |
|---|---|
| Gait disturbance only | 5 |
| Dementia only | 2 |
| Dementia with gait disturbance | 28 |
| Urinary with gait disturbance | 4 |
| Urinary with dementia | 1 |
Other presenting symptoms of iNPH patients which may be due to other associated diseases such as parkinsonism
| Symptom(s) | Frequency | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| iNPH patients ( | Non-iNPH patients ( | ||
| Bradykinesia | 79 | 32 | <0.001 |
| Rigidity | 43 | 15 | <0.001 |
| Postural instability | 71 | 22 | <0.001 |
| Resting tremor | 5 | 6 | |
The characteristics found in neuro-imaging for the diagnosis of idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus
| Neuro-imaging | Characteristic | Diagnostic findings | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Axial CT of the brain | EI as marker of ventricular volume: EI ≥0.3 indicating pathologic VF[ | Cut-offs for EI to diagnose iNPH (male/female) according to age-group: (sensitivity of 80%)[ | A cut-off value of 0.3 cannot be used to differentiate between normal and enlarged ventricles[ |
| 2 | Coronal CT or MRI | CA was measured at the level of the midpoint of the corpus callosum, found using the mid-sagittal plane, oriented parallel to the floor of the fourth ventricle | Cutoff for CA to predicting response was 105.4°, (sensitivity of 41.5%, specificity of 87%)[ | The average CA for the entire group postoperatively (after 1 year) was 124.3°, which was significantly greater than this same group’s preoperative CA of 111.09° ( |
| For every degree decrease in the CA, a patient is 4% more likely to experience benefit from surgery[ | ||||
| 3 | MRE | Comparison between iNPH patients using MRE with normal controls to analyze alterations in parenchymal viscoelastic properties with clinical symptoms | Increased stiffness in iNPH in cerebrum, occipital and parietal ( | Surgical failure may suggest an alternative dementing pathology underlying the iNPH-like symptoms[ |
| Postoperative improvement was associated with increased deep gray stiffness ( | ||||
| 4 | Glymphatic MRI | Intrathecal contrast gadobutrol enhancement and clearance in different locations were compared between iNPH and control subjects | Delayed enhancement ( | Method to assess human brain metabolic function and renders a potential for contrast enhanced brain extravascular space imaging[ |
| Larger parenchymal (glymphatic) enhancement peaked overnight in NPH patients ( | ||||
| 5 | 3D-PC MRI technique | Hyperdynamic CSF motion between iNPH and normal control | Studying CSF dynamic showed pressure gradient in the Sylvian aqueduct was significantly different in patient with iNPH when compared with HC ( | Patients with iNPH and AD showed similar CSF motion profiles[ |
| 6 | Axial CT of the brain | The Silver Index (DESH): ratio between the areas of the SF and the SS at the vertex | The mean value of the silver index in patients possible iNPH was 11.52±1.68 compared to 1. ±0.98 in the control group ( | The sensitivity and specificity of Silver Index were 82.8% and 96.2 respectively[ |
| 7 | MR phase-contrast-cine | To quantitatively assess the flow of CSF in the aqueduct in iNPH and HC: Vpeak, SV, MinV, Vpeak (Vpeak-s, Vpeak-d) and flow volume (Vols, Vold) of the systole and diastole | The CSF Vpeak, SV, MinV, Vpeak-d, Vols, Vold of the systole and diastole significantly increased in iNPH patients compared to normal control ( | Degree of rising in diastole phase exceeds that of systole phase in iNPH resulting in the reversal of netflow direction may play a key role in the occurrence of VM in iNPH patients[ |
| 8 | MRI water ADC | FPV, region PDWM and LN in iNPH, AD, sVD | ADC | Different patterns of ADC values can differentiate between AD, sVD and iNPH, even when other MRI sequences appear morphologically similar[ |
| 9 | Pseudo continuous arterial Spin-Labeling Perfusion MRI | Differences in rCP between iNPH and HC | PVWM: iNPH<HC ( | Cognitive function in patients correlated with CBF in the PVWM, cerebellum and pons ( |
| LN: iNPH<HC ( | ||||
| Thalamus: iNPH<HC ( | ||||
| 10 | CTP | Preoperative CBF in the normal appearing and PVWM, the LN and the GP comparing iNPH and age-matched HI as control | The preoperative CBF in iNPH patients was significantly reduced in the normal appearing PVWM, LN and GP[ | After shunt diversion, CBF increased in responders in all anatomical regions by 2.5%-32% to the perfusion level of HI, but remained significantly reduced in the PVWM of nonresponders[ |
| No CBF differences were found between responders and nonresponders[ | ||||
| 11 | CT scans volumetric study | Comparison between NPH (resorption disorder) and non-NPH (BA) at the SS and BCs (SV) and VV[ | The CSF volume in the VV was evidently greater than that in the SSs and SV in NPH patients compared with BA patients | The discriminant analysis enables the achievement of a high percentage of correct classification of patients to the appropriate group determined on the result of a lumbar infusion test[ |
| 12 | 3D-volumetric study of iNPH +/- AD | Brain to ventricle ratios at the anterior and posterior commissure; CC to ventricle ratios, volume of the BC and SF | iNPH: Small CC, large BC and SF | The distribution of the SSs in the iNPH with AD group was the most deformed among these three groups[ |
| Mean ventricular volume: iNPH > iNPH + AD>AD[ | ||||
| 13 | High-field 3D MRI | VE, SS in the Cv, BC and SF between iNPH and secondary NPH | iNPH: VE with large SS at the BC and SF but diminished at Cv | Disproportionate CSF distribution in iNPH is the compensatory direct CSF communication between the inferior horn of the lateral ventricles and the ambient cistern at the choroidal fissure[ |
| Secondary NPH: VE with diminished SS at BC, SF and Cv (blockage of CSF drainage from the SSs)[ |
3D – Three-dimensional; CT – Computed tomography; EI – Evans’ index; NPH – Normal pressure hydrocephalus; iNPH – Idiopathic NPH; MR – Magnetic resonance; MRI – MR imaging; CA – Callosal angle’s; MRE – MR elastography; ROI – Regions-of-interest; 3D-PC – 3D phase contrast; CSF – Cerebrospinal fluid; AD – Alzheimer’s disease; DESH – Disproportionately enlarged SS hydrocephalus; Vpeak – Peak velocity; SV – Stroke volume; MinV – Minute flow volume; FPV – Frontal periventricular; PDWM – Parietal deep white matter; LN – Lenticular nuclei; sVD – Sub-cortical vascular dementia; ADC – Apparent diffusion coefficient; rCP – Regional cerebral perfusion; HC – Healthy control; CBF – Cerebral blood flow; CTP – CT perfusion; PVWM – Periventricular white matter; LN – Lentiform nucleus; GP – Global parenchyma; HI – Healthy individual; BA – Brain atrophy; VV – Ventricular system; CC – Convexity cistern; BCs – Basal cisterns; SF – Sylvian fissure; VE – Ventricular enlargement; SSs – Subarachnoid spaces; Cv – Convexity; VM – Ventriculomegaly
The clinical procedures for the diagnosis of idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus
| Procedure | Characteristic | Diagnostic findings | Remarks | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CSF removal test/tap test | 30-50 ml CSF tap is performed via lumbar puncture in patient with VM | A positive response when there is improvement in the clinical symptoms. (Gait can be assessed quantitatively using the 3-m TUG test or the 10-m straight walk test)[ | The mini-mental state examination, FAB, and/or trail-making tests are applied for the assessment of cognition[ |
| FAB postdiagnostic CFSTT comparing responder and nonresponder | Higher preoperative FAB score in CFSTT responder (10.4±3.7) than nonresponder (7.6±4.4)[ | There was association of FAB with the gait function suggesting similar circuits producing gait symptoms and frontal lobe functions in iNPH[ | ||
| Logistic regression analysis using the FAB score as independent variable showed a significant influence of the FAB on the differential diagnosis of CSFTT responders and nonresponders ( | ||||
| Finger tapping and verbal fluency post CSF tap test | Post-lumbar puncture amelioration of verbal fluency and finger tapping deficits in iNPH compared with nonneurocognitive improvement in iNPH-like group[ | The test can be used to predict positive postshunt clinical outcome[ | ||
| Simultaneous quantification of cognition and gait (dual task gait assessment and mental imagery of locomotion) before and 24 h after CSF tapping | Improvements seen in iNPH compared to iNPH mimics[ | iNPH mimics (i.e., vascular dementia or other parkinsonian syndromes)[ | ||
| Comparing cognitive impairment (iNPH-CI) and patients with iNPH and normal cognition, looking at gait improvement 2-4 h following STT | Significant improvement of gait parameters in patients without cognitive impairment following STT, but patients with iNPH-CI did not benefit from STT[ | Further studies are needed to elucidate the associations of cognitive impairment and quantitative gait parameters measured early and at later time points after STT[ | ||
| TUG and its iTUG after CSF tapping between iNPH and its mimics | Mental imagery of locomotion was modified after CSF tapping in iNPH patients, but not in the mimics[ | The test before and after CSF tapping could help to identify iNPH patients from patients with similar neurological conditions[ | ||
| A comparison of trunk sway was performed between HE and patients with various types of hydrocephalus VM | iNPH have significant higher trunk sway compared to HE in standing task, measured by body-worn gyroscopic system ( | The gyroscopic system quantitatively assessed postural deficits in iNPH[ | ||
| ONSD between supine and upright positions ONSD-V before and after lumbar puncture | Mean prepuncture ONSD-V was significantly lower in healthy volunteers and patients with no response to CSF removal (Fisher’s test) (0.05 ± 0.14 mm [SD]) than in responsive patients (0.37 ± 0.20 mm [SD], | The ONSD-V before and after STT correlated well with the clinical effects of CSF removal[ | ||
| 2 | SVW | Time-averaged signal strength was calculated over the full recording time (ICPS mean) and over the wave periods (ICPS) following ELD and ventriculoperitoneal shunting | Significant association between ICPS ( | Comparison between NPH patients and non-NPH patients[ |
| 3 | CSF markers | The expression of hsa-miR-4274 in CSF in patients clinically diagnosed with iNPH, possible iNPH with PS, possible iNPH with AD, and nonaffected elderly individuals | The expression of hsa-miR-4274 in CSF was decreased in cohort of PS group patients ( | A three-step qRT-PCR analysis of the CSF samples was performed to detect miRNAs that were differentially expressed in the groups[ |
| PTPRQ in iNPH and AD patients | PTPRQ concentration in the CSF was significantly higher in patients with iNPH compared with those with AD | PTPRQ may be a useful biomarker for discriminating between patients with iNPH and AD, and may be a potential companion biomarker to identify SNRs among patients with iNPH[ | ||
| The PTPRQ concentration in the CSF of nonresponders to shunt operation (SNRs) tended to be relatively lower compared with that in the responders[ | ||||
| CSF proteins: Tf | Brain-type Tf levels decreased in iNPH compared with non-iNPH patients[ | Brain-type Tf is a prognostic marker for recovery from dementia after shunt surgery for iNPH[ | ||
| Brain-type Tf levels rapidly returned to normal levels within 1-3 months after shunt surgery in iNPH[ | ||||
| 4 | The computer-aided intrathecal infusion test | The resistance to CSF outflow in the intrathecal infusion test with a constant-flow technique between NPH or those with cerebral atrophy | Resistance to CSF outflow correlated significantly with improvement ( | A further differentiation into early stage and advanced stage was made by measuring the compliance[ |
CSF – Cerebrospinal fluid; FAB – Frontal assessment battery; CSFTT – CSF fluid tap test; OR – Odds ratio; CI – Confidence interval; NPH – Normal pressure hydrocephalus; iNPH – Idiopathic NPH; STT – Spinal tap test; TUG – Timed Up and Go; iTUG – Imagined version TUG; HE – Healthy elderly; VM – Ventriculomegaly; ONSD – Optic nerve sheath diameter; ONSD-V – ONSD variability; ELD – External lumbar drainage; PS – Parkinsonian spectrum; AD – Alzheimer’s disease; PTPRQ – Protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor type Q; qRT-PCR – Real-time quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; ICP – Intracranial pressure; Tf – Transferrin; SVW – Slow vasogenic ICP wave; SD – Standard deviation; ICPSmean – ICP over the full recording time; ICPS – ICP over the wave periods; SNRs – Shunt non-responders
Types of cerebrospinal fluid diversion procedures in idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus patients
| Procedure | Frequency (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | LP shunt | 55.1[ |
| 2 | VP shunt | 43.2[ |
| 3 | VA shunt | 30.2[ |
| 4 | Ventriculo-epiplooic shunt[ | |
| 5 | ETV | 4.8[ |
LP – Lumboperitoneal; VP – Ventriculoperitoneal; VA – Ventriculoartrial; ETV – Endoscopic third ventriculostomy