Endoscopic management of septated, multiloculated hydrocephalus

Objective: Is to define the role of neuroendoscopy in the management of cases with multiloculated hydrocephalus. Methods: This study was carried out on 14 patients suffering from septated, multiloculated hydrocephalus. The patients’ ages were between 6 and 20 months. All patients passed through the...

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Main Author: Mohammed A. Eshra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2014-06-01
Series:Alexandria Journal of Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2090506813000985
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spelling doaj-aa18c9f3b20446eca5db977cd54a76462021-01-02T04:25:48ZengTaylor & Francis GroupAlexandria Journal of Medicine2090-50682014-06-0150212312610.1016/j.ajme.2013.11.002Endoscopic management of septated, multiloculated hydrocephalusMohammed A. EshraObjective: Is to define the role of neuroendoscopy in the management of cases with multiloculated hydrocephalus. Methods: This study was carried out on 14 patients suffering from septated, multiloculated hydrocephalus. The patients’ ages were between 6 and 20 months. All patients passed through the well-known popular scenario of shunts and their problems of infection, obstruction, revision, hemorrhage and/or shunt removal. The aim of endoscopic interventions was to connect as many cysts to the cyst harboring the fenestrated end of the shunt keeping in mind to try as much as possible to drain the larger cysts especially if causing midline shift. Results: Two weeks post-operatively a CT scan follow up was done in all patients. We needed to re-do the procedure in 11 patients due to the presence of residual compartments not opened and not drained by the existing shunts. Of those 11 patients with two endoscopic trials, only 3 patients needed adding new shunt application as the endoscopic trials failed to unify all compartments. Conclusion: The treatment of loculated hydrocephalus remains a difficult problem in the practice of neurosurgery, yet neuroendoscopy has yielded encouraging results and may be able to dramatically change the prognosis of this troublesome condition in the near future. So neuroendoscopic surgery can be considered a valid alternative to traditional multiple shunt placement surgery and craniotomy in the management of multiloculated hydrocephalus.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2090506813000985HydrocephalusMultiloculatedEndoscopic fenestration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohammed A. Eshra
spellingShingle Mohammed A. Eshra
Endoscopic management of septated, multiloculated hydrocephalus
Alexandria Journal of Medicine
Hydrocephalus
Multiloculated
Endoscopic fenestration
author_facet Mohammed A. Eshra
author_sort Mohammed A. Eshra
title Endoscopic management of septated, multiloculated hydrocephalus
title_short Endoscopic management of septated, multiloculated hydrocephalus
title_full Endoscopic management of septated, multiloculated hydrocephalus
title_fullStr Endoscopic management of septated, multiloculated hydrocephalus
title_full_unstemmed Endoscopic management of septated, multiloculated hydrocephalus
title_sort endoscopic management of septated, multiloculated hydrocephalus
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Alexandria Journal of Medicine
issn 2090-5068
publishDate 2014-06-01
description Objective: Is to define the role of neuroendoscopy in the management of cases with multiloculated hydrocephalus. Methods: This study was carried out on 14 patients suffering from septated, multiloculated hydrocephalus. The patients’ ages were between 6 and 20 months. All patients passed through the well-known popular scenario of shunts and their problems of infection, obstruction, revision, hemorrhage and/or shunt removal. The aim of endoscopic interventions was to connect as many cysts to the cyst harboring the fenestrated end of the shunt keeping in mind to try as much as possible to drain the larger cysts especially if causing midline shift. Results: Two weeks post-operatively a CT scan follow up was done in all patients. We needed to re-do the procedure in 11 patients due to the presence of residual compartments not opened and not drained by the existing shunts. Of those 11 patients with two endoscopic trials, only 3 patients needed adding new shunt application as the endoscopic trials failed to unify all compartments. Conclusion: The treatment of loculated hydrocephalus remains a difficult problem in the practice of neurosurgery, yet neuroendoscopy has yielded encouraging results and may be able to dramatically change the prognosis of this troublesome condition in the near future. So neuroendoscopic surgery can be considered a valid alternative to traditional multiple shunt placement surgery and craniotomy in the management of multiloculated hydrocephalus.
topic Hydrocephalus
Multiloculated
Endoscopic fenestration
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2090506813000985
work_keys_str_mv AT mohammedaeshra endoscopicmanagementofseptatedmultiloculatedhydrocephalus
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