Pediatric post-dural puncture headache and paraplegia.
Wouter I SchievinkMarcel M MayaRachelle B TachéCorey T WalkerPublished in: Headache (2024)
A cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak developed in a 14-year-old girl and a 12-year-old boy following a diagnostic lumbar puncture. Two days and sixteen years later, respectively, paraplegia developed due to a functional disorder. Imaging revealed an extensive extradural CSF collection in both patients and digital subtraction myelography was required to pinpoint the exact site of a ventral dural puncture hole where the lumbar spinal needle had gone "through and through" the dural sac. The CSF leak was complicated by cortical vein thrombosis in one patient. Both patients underwent uneventful surgical repair of the ventral dural puncture hole with prompt resolution of the paraplegia. Iatrogenic ventral CSF leaks may become exceptionally long standing and may be complicated by paraplegia on a functional basis both in the acute and chronic phases.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- cerebrospinal fluid
- ultrasound guided
- spinal cord
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- deep brain stimulation
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- liver failure
- patient reported outcomes
- minimally invasive
- single cell
- spinal cord injury
- mass spectrometry
- magnetic resonance imaging
- hepatitis b virus
- case report
- molecular dynamics
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- patient reported
- respiratory failure
- contrast enhanced
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- perovskite solar cells
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