Department of NeuroSurgery, Section of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.
J Plast Reconstr Aesthet Surg. 2010 Feb;63(2):213-7. doi: 10.1016/j.bjps.2008.09.023. Epub 2008 Nov 29.
A critical element in the prevention of wound and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) infections after craniotomies is the prevention of postprocedural CSF leaks. The salvage of infected prosthetic dural material in this milieu is not adequately addressed in the literature and is the subject of this study.
We performed a 7-year retrospective review of the Yale-New Haven Hospital patient records to identify successful salvage strategies in patients with relentless CSF leaks. Twenty data points were collected, including original diagnosis, nature of the procedure, presence of dural graft, definitive treatment of the leak, culture results and pre- and postoperative antibiotics.
Thirteen patients experienced post-craniotomy CSF leaks that required surgical intervention. The most common cause of the original craniotomy (54% of patients) was an oncological aetiology, followed by ruptured aneurysms or haemorrhage in 31% of the patients. Of the 13 patients experiencing CSF leaks, 76% involved the posterior skull base, and therefore a trapezius muscle flap was used in 38% of the cases. The Bovine pericardial graft (10 our of 13), a nonautologous graft, was left intact, and CSF drainage procedures were employed in most patients Growth of gram-positive organisms on cultures was found in 76% of the cases. The most frequent offenders were Staphylococcus aureus (five of the 13), coagulase-negative staphylococcal species (two out of 13), and methicillin-resistant S. aureus (two out of 13). Vancomycin was administered in all cases preoperatively. All 13 patients who underwent open surgery for CSF leak had complete resolution of the leak without need for additional reconstructive surgical intervention.
Comprehensive method of treating CSF leaks in conjunction with the salvage of bovine pericardial dural grafts may be a viable clinical option.
在开颅手术后预防伤口和脑脊液(CSF)感染的关键因素是预防术后 CSF 漏。在文献中,对此类环境中感染的人造硬脑膜材料的挽救处理并未得到充分解决,这也是本研究的主题。
我们对耶鲁-纽黑文医院患者记录进行了 7 年的回顾性研究,以确定持续 CSF 漏患者的成功挽救策略。共收集了 20 个数据点,包括原始诊断、手术性质、硬脑膜移植物的存在、漏口的明确治疗、培养结果以及术前和术后抗生素的使用。
13 例患者经历了开颅术后 CSF 漏,需要手术干预。最初开颅的最常见原因是肿瘤病因(54%的患者),其次是破裂的动脉瘤或出血(31%的患者)。在 13 例 CSF 漏患者中,76%的患者涉及后颅底,因此在 38%的病例中使用了斜方肌皮瓣。牛心包移植物(13 例中有 10 例),一种非自体移植物,保持完整,大多数患者采用 CSF 引流术。在 76%的病例中,培养出革兰氏阳性菌。最常见的病原体是金黄色葡萄球菌(13 例中有 5 例)、凝固酶阴性葡萄球菌(13 例中有 2 例)和耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌(13 例中有 2 例)。所有病例均在术前给予万古霉素。所有接受 CSF 漏开放性手术的 13 例患者均完全解决了漏口,无需进一步的重建手术干预。
结合牛心包硬脑膜移植物的挽救处理,全面治疗 CSF 漏可能是一种可行的临床选择。