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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of primary Intracranial Hypotension (PIH) is described. This syndrome consists of spontaneous lowering of CSF pressure with traction headache. It is a benign disorder and is self-limited. The cause is unknown, but local choroid plexus vasospasm, possibly due to a hypothalamic disturbance, has been suggested, as has leakage of CSF through spontaneous arachnoid tears. Transient symptomatic relief was achieved with 5% CO2 inhalation, apparently due to increase in cerebral blood flow.
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PMID:Primary intracranial hypotension: the syndrome of spontaneous low cerebospinal fluid pressure with traction headache. 83 25

Intracranial hypotension, which is most commonly caused by lumbar puncture, can lead to intense meningeal enhancement, which resolves on its own once the intracranial hypotension has been corrected. The characteristic clinical presentation of severe postural headaches with a low opening CSF pressure on subsequent lumbar puncture and a history of prior dural puncture should alert one to the diagnosis, thus avoiding an extensive workup for carcinomatosis or infection.
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PMID:Postcontrast meningeal MR enhancement secondary to intracranial hypotension caused by lumbar puncture. 789 Aug 59

Intracranial hypotension (IH) is present when cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pressure is 60mm H2O or lower and there has been no previous dural puncture. IH is more common in women than in men (3:1). Orthostatic headache is the cardinal symptom. Visual, auditory, and other symptoms occur. Postulated mechanisms include sagging of the brain, dilation of intracranial veins, and activation of adenosine receptors. Examination may disclose visual field defects. The condition may be primary (probably related to an occult dural leak) or secondary to many causes that include lumbar puncture, trauma, pneumonectomy, diabetic coma, and uremia. Patients with postural headache should undergo neuroimaging prior to lumbar puncture. Radionuclide cisternography is the most sensitive means of demonstrating a CSF fistula. Severe, intractable headache associated with IH may respond to intravenous of oral caffeine. An epidural blood patch and epidural infusion of normal saline are treatment measures for symptoms of IH that follow lumbar puncture.
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PMID:Intracranial hypotension. 887 51

Intracranial hypotension causes the postural headache that sometimes follows lumbar puncture. When postural headache and associated symptoms occur after lumbar puncture, the diagnosis is usually obvious. However, similar symptoms may occur after minor trauma or without an obvious precipitating cause (spontaneous intracranial hypotension: SIH). SIH is rare, but is now increasingly recognized as a cause of postural headache. We encountered two cases of SIH showing typical neuroradiological findings. Case 1 is a 47-year-old man who was admitted with severe frontalgia. CT scan revealed vague visualization of bilateral Sylvian fissures and slit ventricles. Spinal fluid pressure was 6cm H2O in the lateral recumbent position. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) showed slight lymphocytic pleocytosis. We treated him as having viral meningitis. His headache improved gradually and he was discharged 2 weeks later with slight occipitalgia. One week after discharge, he complained of severe headache again and plain CT showed bilateral subdural hematoma. The subdural hematoma in both sides was evacuated and his headache improved after the operation. Follow-up CT scans two months later showed normalization of ventricle size and cisterns. Case 2 is a 52-year-old woman who was admitted with severe occipitalgia. CT scan on admission showed slit ventricles and the disappearance of the suprasellar cistern and the Sylvian fissure. Spinal fluid pressure was 3cm H2O. Gd-enhanced MRI showed remarkable meningeal enhancement and effacement of the optic chiasm suggesting brain sagging. Her headache improved 2 weeks later after strict bed rest and oral pain relief drugs. The follow-up MRI showed disappearance of abnormal meningeal enhancement and normalization of optic chiasma effacement. SIH is one of the important differential diagnoses of patients complaining of postural headache. Meningeal enhancement of gadolinium-enhanced MRI is an important finding to diagnose SIH. We have to consider SIH when diagnosing postural headache.
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PMID:[Spontaneous intracranial hypotension with severe headache and typical neuroradiological findings: report of two cases]. 914 2

Intracranial hypotension (IH) is essential or, more frequently, secondary. This syndrome is characterized by severe postural headache and low opening cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pressure; although other symptoms may exist. In this study five patients are investigated. Neuroimaging showed: on computerized tomography scan (CT), poor visualization of the cerebral sulci with small ventricles; on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), subdural fluid collections with enhancement on the convexity, along the tentorium and in the upper cervix after administration of contrast medium and downward displacement of the brain. Radionuclide cisternography was normal in the two patients who underwent this treatment as well as the meningeal biopsy in another patient. In all patients the opening CSF pressure was low or unmeasurable. The clinical syndrome spontaneously recovered contextually to normalization of neuroradiological findings. The possible pathogenesis (dural border cell layer tear) was discussed and the importance of diagnostic confirmation with MRI and measurement of CSF pressure when IH is thought to be present was underlined.
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PMID:Intracranial hypotension syndrome: neuroimaging in five spontaneous cases and etiopathogenetic correlations. 963 2

A patient with severe and protracted symptoms from intracranial hypotension is described. The patient's presentation was marked by diffuse encephalopathy and profound depression of consciousness. This case report expands the presently known clinical spectrum of this uncommon and generally benign illness. The clinical and laboratory findings typically observed in the syndrome of intracranial hypotension are outlined. The pathophysiological mechanisms of the phenomenon are briefly discussed. Intracranial hypotension is a potentially severe illness with specific treatments that are distinct from the treatment of most neurological diseases. Three cardinal features--postural headache, pachymeningitis, and descent of midline cerebral structures--should prompt the diagnosis.
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PMID:Intracranial hypotension presenting with severe encephalopathy. Case report. 972 24

Intracranial hypotension (IH) is a treatable cause of persistent headaches. Persistent cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak at a lumbar puncture (LP) site may cause IH. We present postcontrast MRI of a patient with post-lumbar-puncture headache (LPHA) showing abnormal, intense, diffuse, symmetric, contiguous dural-meningeal (pachymeningeal) enhancement of the supratentorial and infratentorial intracranial dura, including convexities, interhemispheric fissure, tentorium, and falx. MRI also showed abnormal dural venous sinus enhancement, a new finding in LPHA, suggesting compensatory venous expansion. Thus, IH and venodilatation may play a role in the development of LPHA.
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PMID:MRI findings in lumbar puncture headache syndrome: abnormal dural-meningeal and dural venous sinus enhancement. 1041 79

Chronic headaches due to intracranial hypo- or hypertension (IHS codes 7.2 and 7.1) may be difficult to diagnose. In this article, we review their principal clinical characteristics, etiologies and therapies. Intracranial hypotension may be caused by CSF linkage, e.g. after lumbar puncture. It may also be "idiopathic" in which case a CSF leak, usually at the spinal level, may be difficult to demonstrate. Postural headache is the clinical hallmark of intracranial hypotension. The diagnosis is confirmed by leptomeningeal enhancement on MRI scans. The headache of benign intracranial hypertension may be aggravated by the supine position and accompanied by transient visual obscurations and tinnitus. Papillary edema supports the diagnosis but may be absent in some cases. Increased opening pressure of the CSF will confirm the diagnosis. Etiologies such as cerebral venous thrombosis, have to be excluded by adequate imaging methods. In both hypo- and hypertension syndromes, various therapeutic strategies have been proposed.
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PMID:[Benign intracranial hypo- and hypertension]. 1054 94

Intracranial hypotension causes orthostatic headaches and diffuse pachymeningeal gadolinium enhancement on magnetic resonance imaging with or without subdural fluid collections or imaging evidence of descent of the brain. A review of the literature and my experience and investigations in the past decade reveal a broadening clinical and imaging spectrum of the syndrome. Besides the classic clinical-imaging syndrome of orthostatic headaches, diffuse pachymeningeal gadolinium enhancement, and low cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pressure, several modes of presentation are recognized, including (1) the typical clinical-imaging syndrome with CSF pressures consistently within normal limits, (2) absence of diffuse pachymeningeal gadolinium enhancement with presence of low CSF pressures and typical clinical manifestations, and (3) absence of headaches despite low CSF pressures and presence of diffuse pachymeningeal gadolinium enhancement. Furthermore, in some patients with headaches, the orthostatic headaches may evolve into lingering chronic daily headaches, although they may be more prominent in upright positions. What determines the various clinical and imaging features of this syndrome seems to be the loss of CSF volume as the independent variable, while other manifestations, including clinical features, CSF pressures, and imaging abnormalities, are variables dependent on the CSF volume. The term CSF hypovolemia is proposed for this syndrome because the term intracranial hypotension no longer seems adequate to embrace all the variations that have emerged.
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PMID:Spontaneous cerebrospinal fluid leaks: from intracranial hypotension to cerebrospinal fluid hypovolemia--evolution of a concept. 1056 May 99

Intracranial hypotension is a rare, and possibly underrecognized, cause of headache in middle age. Occurring spontaneously in the vast majority of cases, it has been occasionally reported after certain neurosurgical procedures involving craniectomy. We report a unique situation in which a patient developed severe postural headache typical of intracranial hypotension, which was complicated by bilateral subdural hematomas, immediately following a routine lumbar diskectomy; the headache resolved spontaneously. We suggest that an intraoperative microscopic dural breach was the site of sustained, but self-limited, cerebrospinal fluid leakage that eventually led to intracranial hypotension.
Headache 2000 Jun
PMID:Bilateral subdural hematomas following routine lumbar diskectomy. 1084 45


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