0521779407-10 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 6, 2007 17:44
854 Intracranial Hypertension Intracranial Hypotension
■Spinal tap should not be undertaken prior to imaging study; reveals
increased ICP & may suggest cause (eg, SAH, meningitis) if not evi-
dent on MRI
differential diagnosis
■All causes of increased ICP must be considered & excluded by tests
■MRI identifies, localizes & often characterizes structural lesions
■For pseudotumor cerebri, search for causes such as venous sinus
thrombosis (imaging studies), hormonal disorder (oral contracep-
tive use, Cushing’s or Addison’s disease, steroid withdrawal, hypo-
parathyroidism), iatrogenic cause (hypervitaminosis A, tetracycline
therapy in infants), chronic meningitis
management
■Lower ICP acutely if herniation threatened from structural lesion;
give mannitol
specific therapy
■Depends on cause
■Reduce ICP by hyperventilation & w/ mannitol when caused by acute
intracranial lesions; consider surgical decompression of cerebellar
hematomas or superficial cerebral hematoma exerting mass effect
■For pseudotumor, give acetazolamide, diuretics or both; prednisone
daily; repeated spinal taps, shunt placement or optic nerve sheath
fenestration may be needed to lower ICP or protect optic nerve; treat
any identified cause of pseudotumor
follow-up
■Depends on cause
■For pseudotumor, measure CSF pressure weekly, then monthly, until
control ensured; monitor visual fields & size of blind spot monthly
thereafter
complications and prognosis
■Depends on cause of increased ICP
■Optic atrophy w/ resultant blindness is the consequence of untreated
pseudotumor; idiopathic pseudotumor is self-limited & treatment
can typically be reduced and discontinued after several months
Intracranial Hypotension..............................
MICHAEL J. AMINOFF, MD, DSc
history & physical
■Headache, relieved by recumbency & worsened by upright position;
worsened by Valsalva maneuver