Distribution of cisternal blood in patients with acute hydrocephalus after subarachnoid hemorrhage. |
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Authors: | D Hasan H L Tanghe |
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Affiliation: | Department of Neurology, University Hospital Dijkzigt, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. |
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Abstract: | The distribution of cisternal blood in relation to the development of acute hydrocephalus was studied in 246 consecutive patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage who were admitted within 72 hours. Patients with evidence on the initial computed tomograph (CT) of subarachnoid hemorrhage caused by other than a ruptured aneurysm and patients with a negative angiography were excluded. Acute hydrocephalus (defined as a bicaudate index, measured on the initial CT or on a repeat CT within 1 week after subarachnoid hemorrhage, exceeding the 95th percentile for age) was found on the initial CT in 50 (20%) of the 246 patients and on a repeat CT in 9 other patients. Ventricular blood was found significantly more often in patients with acute hydrocephalus than in those in whom acute hydrocephalus did not develop (28 of 59 [47%] versus 58 of 187 [31%]; chi 2 = 4.634, p = 0.031). When the analysis was restricted to the 86 patients with ventricular blood, no significant differences were found in the total amount of cisternal blood and in the distribution of cisternal blood between patients with and without hydrocephalus. In contrast, among the 160 patients without ventricular blood, hydrocephalus was associated with a slightly higher total amount of cisternal blood (Wilcoxon's rank sum test, p = 0.023), and significantly more patients with acute hydrocephalus had a higher score in both ambient cisterns than patients without acute hydrocephalus (20 of 31 [65%] versus 41 of 129 [32%]; chi 2 = 10.007, p = 0.002).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) |
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