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Journal ArticleDOI

Hypertensive slit ventricle syndrome: pseudotumor cerebri with a malfunctioning shunt?

Grant A. Bateman
- 01 Dec 2013 - 
- Vol. 119, Iss: 6, pp 1503-1510
TLDR
A literature review indicates that an underlying venous impairment may be functioning in the patients who re-present with small ventricles following shunt malfunction, and 3 cases of SVS associated with elevated CSF pressure are presented.
Abstract
Symptomatic shunt malfunction without ventricular enlargement is known as slit ventricle syndrome (SVS). Patients presenting with this syndrome are not a homogeneous group. Of the 5 different types classified by Rekate, Type 1 is caused by CSF overdrainage and is associated with low pressures; Types 2 and 3 are associated with shunt blockage and elevated CSF pressures; Type 4 is cephalocranial disproportion that increases brain parenchymal pressure but not CSF pressure; and Type 5 is headache unrelated to shunt function. The low and normal CSF pressure types are relatively well understood, but the high-pressure forms are more problematic. In the high-pressure forms of SVS it is said that the lack of ventricular dilation is related to a reduction in brain compliance analogous to idiopathic intracranial hypertension or pseudotumor cerebri. Despite this, there is little evidence in the literature to support this conjecture. With this in mind, 3 cases of SVS associated with elevated CSF pressure are presented. The MR venogram findings and hemodynamics of these 3 cases are shown to be identical to those of pseudotumor cerebri. A literature review indicates that an underlying venous impairment may be functioning in the patients who re-present with small ventricles following shunt malfunction.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Shunt overdrainage syndrome: review of the literature.

TL;DR: In this review, all the main facets related with shunt overdrainage are commented on.
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Cerebrospinal fluid absorption block at the vertex in chronic hydrocephalus: obstructed arachnoid granulations or elevated venous pressure?

TL;DR: The size of the venous sinuses normally does not change over the age range investigated but sinus pressure is reduced proportional to an age-related blood flow reduction.
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Role of aquaporins in hydrocephalus: what do we know and where do we stand? A systematic review.

TL;DR: A very interesting result is the general consensus on increase of AQP4 in hydrocephalic patients, unless in patients suffering from idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus, where AQP 4 shows a tendency in reduction.
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Porohyperelastic anatomical models for hydrocephalus and idiopathic intracranial hypertension.

TL;DR: The model simulates all the clinical features in correlation with the MR images obtained in patients with hydrocephalus and IIH, thus providing support for the role of the transmantle pressure gradient and capillary CSF absorption in CSF-related brain deformation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

CSF hydrodynamic studies in man. 1. Method of constant pressure CSF infusion.

TL;DR: It is concluded that the arachnoidal villi, when once opened, are not further distended by pressure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intracranial venous sinus hypertension: cause or consequence of hydrocephalus in infants?

TL;DR: The present study demonstrated that SSVP recording during ICP variations induced by CSF withdrawal permits differentiation between a reversible collapse of the sigmoid sinus due to increased ICP and a fixed obstructive lesion of the sinuses.
Journal ArticleDOI

MR venography in idiopathic intracranial hypertension: unappreciated and misunderstood

TL;DR: A historical failure to use normal healthy controls to establish the boundaries between imaging artefact, normal anatomical variant, and disease means that the pathological significance of the different appearances of the lateral sinuses on MRV has not so far been appreciated.
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