| Literature DB >> 33523299 |
Dorian Hirschmann1, Beate Kranawetter1, Matthias Tomschik1, Jonathan Wais1, Fabian Winter1, Josa M Frischer1, Matthias Millesi1, Johannes Herta1, Karl Roessler1, Christian Dorfer2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: New-onset seizures after cranioplasty (NOSAC) are reported to be a frequent complication of cranioplasty (CP) after decompressive hemicraniectomy (DHC). There are considerable differences in the incidence of NOSAC and contradictory data about presumed risk factors in the literature. We suggest NOSAC to be a consequence of patients' initial condition which led to DHC, rather than a complication of subsequent CP. We conducted a retrospective analysis to verify our hypothesis.Entities:
Keywords: Cranioplasty; Follow-up; Risk factors; Seizures
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33523299 PMCID: PMC8053646 DOI: 10.1007/s00701-021-04720-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neurochir (Wien) ISSN: 0001-6268 Impact factor: 2.216
Indications for craniectomy and rates of new-onset seizures
| Indication for craniectomy ( | Patients, | Patients with new-onset seizures after cranioplasty (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum one seizure recorded | Multiple seizures recorded | ||
| Ischemic stroke | 75 (27.2%) | 22 (29.3%) | 17 (22.7%) |
| IPH | 59 (21.3%) | 13 (22.0%) | 8 (13.6%) |
| SAH | 83 (30.1%) | 19 (22.9%) | 15 (18.1%) |
| TBI | 53 (19.2%) | 9 (17.0%) | 6 (11.3%) |
| Other | 6 (2.2%) | 1 (16.7%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Total | 276 (100%) | 64 (23.2%) | 46 (16.7%) |
Table 1 shows an even distribution of indications for craniectomy among the cohort of 276 patients who underwent cranioplasty. Numbers and proportions of patients with new-onset seizures are given (single and multiple seizures). Differences in the rate of new-onset seizures after cranioplasty between DHC indication groups were not significant. CP, cranioplasty; DHC, decompressive hemicraniectomy; IPH, intraparenchymal hemorrhage; SAH, subarachnoid hemorrhage; TBI, traumatic brain injury
Presumed risk factors for new-onset seizures after CP
| Presumed risk factor ( | Patients with new-onset seizures after CP ( | Patients w/o new-onset seizures after CP ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Indication for DHC | see Table | see Table | 0.515 |
| Artificial material used for CP (%) | 4 (6.3%) | 10 (5.3%) | 0.757 |
| VP shunt prior to CP (%) | 14 (21.9%) | 35 (18.6%) | 0586 |
| Postoperative complications after CP (%) | 8 (12.5%) | 36 (19.1%) | 0.258 |
| Median age at CP in years (min–max) | 49 (19–75) | 50 (18–81) | 0.828 |
| Median time between DHC and CP in days (min–max) | 103 (13–275) | 89 (11–2926*) | 0.287 |
| Median time of follow-up in months (min–max) | 58 (0–189) | 19 (0–186) | < 0.001 |
Table 2 shows presumed risk factors for new-onset seizures after CP according to current literature and the association of the incidence of new-onset seizures with time of follow-up. *In one case, time between DHC and CP was 2926 days; this patient initially refused to undergo cranioplasty for 8 years, until he finally scheduled an appointment at the outpatient clinic. CP, cranioplasty; DHC, decompressive hemicraniectomy; VP, ventriculoperitoneal
Fig. 1Time from CP to seizure onset according to indication for DHC. Figure 1 shows the time to seizure onset for each patient group according to indication for DHC. Four patients with other indications than those listed above were excluded from this Kaplan-Meier plot due to low case number. Furthermore, one patient was excluded due to very long time between CP and seizure onset (2926 days) to enable appropriate visualization. The differences in time to seizure onset between the groups were not significant according to log-rank test. CP, cranioplasty; DHC, decompressive hemicraniectomy; IPH, intraparenchymal hemorrhage; SAH, subarachnoid hemorrhage; TBI, traumatic brain injury
Median time from DHC to CP, from CP to first seizure, and from DHC to first seizure
| Indication for DHC ( | Median time from DHC to CP in days (min–max) | Median time from CP to first seizure in days (min–max) | Median time from DHC to first seizure in days (min–max) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ischemic stroke ( | 140 (25–264) | 138.5 (13–3857) | 315 (106–3967) |
| IPH ( | 95 (13–275) | 183 (7–1088) | 249 (51–1148) |
| SAH ( | 66 (23–239) | 489.5 (4–3874) | 561 (79–3981) |
| TBI ( | 66 (22–187) | 514 (212–1445) | 588 (246–1512) |
| Other ( | 175 | 267 | 442 |
| 0.155 | 0.461 |
Table 3 shows that the median time from DHC to CP differed significantly between patients, grouped according to indication for DHC. There was no significant difference, however, in time from CP to first seizure or in time from DHC to first seizure. CP, cranioplasty; DHC, decompressive hemicraniectomy; IPH, intraparenchymal hemorrhage; SAH, subarachnoid hemorrhage; TBI, traumatic brain injury
The bold value (0.002) is the p-value for Kruskal Wallis test of differences between the median times between DHC and CP according to DHCindication-groups. As mentioned in the "methods" section, p-values blow 0.05 were regarded as significant. Thus the difference between median times between DHC and CP is highliy significant