0521779407-10 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 6, 2007 17:44
Intracranial Hypotension Intraocular Infection 855
■Nausea, vomiting, uni- or bilateral 6th nerve palsy occur commonly;
tinnitus, hyperacusis sometimes occur
■May be history of lumbar puncture (LP) in previous week, or of
trauma
■No neurologic deficit
tests
■None required unless symptoms occur in absence of history of LP;
gadolinium-enhanced MRI may then show dural enhancement or
associated subdural hematoma
differential diagnosis
■Absence of fever, other neurologic symptoms & signs of meningeal
irritation makes meningitis unlikely
■History of trauma suggests cranial CSF fistula (eg, otorrhea or rhin-
orrhea)
■MRI will detect subdural hematoma or pituitary tumor, which may
erode sella to cause CSF leak
■Absence of overt cause suggests CSF leak from arachnoid cyst related
to spinal root sleeve
management
■Bed rest may alleviate headache
specific therapy
■Symptoms occasionally respond to caffeine, sodium benzoate
■Persistent symptoms may respond to epidural blood patch or epidu-
ral or intrathecal saline infusion
■Surgical closure of spontaneous dural leak is required in rare
instances
■Surgery may be required for subdural hematoma or fistula related to
trauma or tumor
follow-up
■None needed once symptoms settle
complications and prognosis
■Symptoms eventually settle spontaneously
Intraocular Infection..................................
TODD P. MARGOLIS, MD, PhD
history & physical
History
■Decreased vision