Presenting Symptomatology and Risk Factors in Pediatric Secondary Intracranial Hypertension due to Venous Sinus Thrombosis

There remains debate regarding the need for venous imaging in pediatric intracranial hypertension. Records of patients aged 18 years or younger who were evaluated in the intracranial hypertension clinic at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, were reviewed. Past medical history, di...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pediatric neurology 2019-12, Vol.101, p.53-56
Hauptverfasser: Dsouza, Shalome, Aylward, Brandon S., Rogers, David L., Aylward, Shawn C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:There remains debate regarding the need for venous imaging in pediatric intracranial hypertension. Records of patients aged 18 years or younger who were evaluated in the intracranial hypertension clinic at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, were reviewed. Past medical history, diagnostic evaluation, and presenting symptoms were examined to evaluate differences in symptomatology presentation and risk factors in patients with pediatric intracranial hypertension with and without thrombosis. A total of 226 patients met inclusion criteria, 145 were diagnosed with primary intracranial hypertension, 81 with secondary intracranial hypertension, with 17 noted to have venous sinus thrombosis as the cause of their secondary intracranial hypertension. Of those with thrombosis, 41.2% did not have any thrombosis risk factors. Headache was the most prominent symptom, present in 73.8% (n = 107) of patients with primary intracranial hypertension, 87.5% (n = 56) of patients with secondary intracranial hypertension without thrombosis, and 82.4% (n = 14) with thrombosis. The only clinically significant difference in presenting symptomatology between the thrombosis and the other groups was nausea or vomiting. Predisposing factors to develop thrombosis were absent in 41.2% of patients. Hence, the need for venous imaging in pediatric intracranial hypertension cannot be clearly determined by clinical presentation or risk factors alone. Patients with indwelling catheters should receive imaging in the region of their catheter to rule out catheter-associated thrombosis.
ISSN:0887-8994
1873-5150
DOI:10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2019.04.016