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Erschienen in: Journal of Medical Case Reports 1/2019

Open Access 01.12.2019 | Case report

Hydrocephalus after foramen magnum decompression for Chiari I malformation successfully treated with the aspiration of pseudomeningocele: a case report

verfasst von: Takashi Kobayashi, Naohisa Miyakoshi, Toshiki Abe, Kazuma Kikuchi, Eiji Abe, Yoichi Shimada

Erschienen in: Journal of Medical Case Reports | Ausgabe 1/2019

Abstract

Background

Pseudomeningocele or cerebrospinal fluid leakage is one of the most common complications of foramen magnum decompression with duraplasty for Chiari I malformation. Usually, cerebrospinal fluid leakage is treated with lumbar drainage and/or secondary suture. However, if hydrocephalus occurs, spinal drainage may cause brain herniation.

Case presentation

A 54-year-old Japanese woman presented to our hospital with a 10-month history of bilateral finger extension weakness and clumsiness. Magnetic resonance imaging showed displacement of her cerebellar tonsils below the foramen magnum level, with syringomyelia presenting from the C4 to T8 level. Suboccipital craniectomy and C1 laminectomy with duraplasty were performed under general anesthesia. At 1 month after discharge, she again presented to our hospital due to severe headache and nausea. Magnetic resonance imaging of her cervical spine showed pseudomeningocele compressing her cerebellum and spinal cord. Magnetic resonance imaging of her brain also showed ventriculomegaly. Pseudomeningocele aspiration was performed, with 25 ml of fluid removed under X-ray control. Immediately after aspiration her headache and nausea decreased, and she reported improvement in her symptoms with increasing bilateral finger extension strength and decreasing bilateral upper extremity numbness at her 1-year follow-up.

Conclusions

Although there is a considerable risk of meningitis with the aspiration procedure of pseudomeningocele, an aspiration procedure may be an easy and effective treatment option for postoperative hydrocephalus after suboccipital craniotomy with duraplasty in a patient treated for Chiari I malformation.
Hinweise

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Abkürzungen
CM-I
Chiari I malformation
CSF
Cerebrospinal fluid
FMD
Foramen magnum decompression
MRI
Magnetic resonance imaging

Background

Pseudomeningocele or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage is one of the most common complications of foramen magnum decompression (FMD) with duraplasty for Chiari I malformation (CM-I) [14]. Usually, CSF leakage is treated with lumbar drainage and/or secondary suture [2]. However, if hydrocephalus occurs, spinal drainage may cause brain herniation [5].

Case presentation

A 54-year-old Japanese woman presented to our hospital with a 10-month history of bilateral finger extension weakness and clumsiness. The chief complaint at her first visit was bilateral ulnar side numbness of her forearm and middle finger, ring finger, and little finger. There was atrophy of intrinsic muscles. She had no decline in her balance or ambulatory abilities. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed displacement of her cerebellar tonsils below the foramen magnum level, with syringomyelia presenting from the C4 to T8 level (Fig. 1). A surgical procedure was planned due to the progressiveness of her neurological conditions.

Operation

Suboccipital craniectomy and C1 laminectomy with duraplasty were performed under general anesthesia. The craniotomy was 3 cm in size and rectangular. After opening the dura in a Y-shaped fashion, a pinhole unexpectedly opened in the arachnoid membrane. The dural graft used an absorbable artificial dural substitute (Seamdura, Gunze Limited Medical Division, Tokyo, Japan), which was carefully sewn into place using a running 5-0 nylon suture. After placement of an absorbable suture reinforcement felt sheet made of polyglycolic acid (Neoveil, Gunze Limited) for use as an absorbable artificial dural substitute interface, the surface was covered by fibrin glue. The total operative time was 3 hours 27 minutes, and there was little estimated blood loss.

Postoperative course

Postoperative bleeding was 80 ml while under a zero vacuum pressure drain, which was removed at 2 days after surgery. Although our patient exhibited no new neurological deficits, she had a prolonged headache. At the time of her release at 1 month after the operation, she still had a slight headache. At 1 month after discharge, she again presented to our hospital due to severe headache and nausea. On examination, her wound was well healed and there was no evidence of CSF leakage or infection. There were also no cranial neurological symptoms observed. MRI of her cervical spine showed pseudomeningocele compressing her cerebellum and spinal cord. MRI of her brain also showed ventriculomegaly (Fig. 2). Pseudomeningocele aspiration with a 22-gauge hypodermic needle was performed, with 25 ml of fluid removed under X-ray control (Fig. 3). Immediately after aspiration, her headache and nausea decreased, and she was subsequently discharged at 3 weeks after aspiration. At 4 months after the operation, cervical spine MRI showed shrinkage of spinal syringomyelia and resolution of the stenosis at the level of the cerebellar tonsils (Fig. 4), although the pseudomeningocele remained. At her 1-year follow-up, she reported improvement in her symptoms with increasing bilateral finger extension strength and decreasing bilateral upper extremity numbness.
Institutional Review Board approval was obtained for this case report, and our patient gave written informed consent to publish this case and any accompanying images.

Discussion and conclusion

Although pseudomeningocele aspiration should be restricted due to possible infection or its recurrence, we were able to successfully treat the myelomeningocele in this case using aspiration. The reason for our success may be because the arachnoid membrane defect was so small. Second, it also might be related to the fact that the symptomatic pseudomeningocele occurred at 2 months after surgery.
Hydrocephalus after FMD occurs in 2 to 8.7% of cases [4, 6, 7]. Although the definitive cause of hydrocephalus remains unknown, some reports have suggested it can be caused by infratentorial fluid collection [8, 9]. Treatment of symptomatic hydrocephalus normally involves drainage of CSF using a ventricular drain [8, 9]. However, since MRI showed the pseudomeningocele was compressing our patient’s cerebellum and spinal cord, we used aspiration of the pseudomeningocele to successfully treat our patient.
Although there is a considerable risk of meningitis with the aspiration procedure of pseudomeningocele, the aspiration procedure may be an easy and effective treatment option for postoperative hydrocephalus after suboccipital craniotomy with duraplasty in a patient treated for CM-I.
Although we could choose FMD without duraplasty to avoid pseudomeningocele, this procedure leads to an unreliable reduction in the symptoms compared with FMD with duraplasty [10]. When duraplasty is employed, no literature supports the superiority of either autologous or non-autologous grafts. However, autologous materials may be a good option because they are non-immunogenic, inexpensive, and capable of creating a watertight closure with the dura [11].

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to Dr Muraishi for his valuable contribution in treating this patient and during the writing of this case report.
Not applicable.
Written informed consent was obtained from the patient for publication of this case report and any accompanying images. A copy of the written consent is available for review by the Editor-in-Chief of this journal.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by/​4.​0/​), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://​creativecommons.​org/​publicdomain/​zero/​1.​0/​) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

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Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

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Metadaten
Titel
Hydrocephalus after foramen magnum decompression for Chiari I malformation successfully treated with the aspiration of pseudomeningocele: a case report
verfasst von
Takashi Kobayashi
Naohisa Miyakoshi
Toshiki Abe
Kazuma Kikuchi
Eiji Abe
Yoichi Shimada
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2019
Verlag
BioMed Central
Erschienen in
Journal of Medical Case Reports / Ausgabe 1/2019
Elektronische ISSN: 1752-1947
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13256-019-2191-8

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