Mattei Tobias A, Bond Brandon J, Sambhara Deepak, Goulart Carlos R, Lin Julian J
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Illinois Neurological Institute, Peoria, Illinois.
J Neurosurg Pediatr. 2013 Dec;12(6):555-64. doi: 10.3171/2013.8.PEDS1399. Epub 2013 Oct 4.
Intracranial arachnoid cysts are a relatively common benign intracranial pathology, accounting for as many as 0.75%-1% of nontraumatic CNS lesions. Although it has already been demonstrated that rupture of arachnoid cysts may lead to subdural hematomas/hygromas, no study to date has investigated benign extracerebral collection in infancy as a possible predisposing factor for further development of arachnoid cysts.
The authors performed a retrospective imaging and chart review of macrocephalic infants 12 months old or younger who were referred to neurosurgical care at OSF St. Francis Medical Center from 2003 to 2010, and who were diagnosed with benign extracerebral fluid collection in infancy on thin-slice (1-mm) head CT scans. Special attention was given to the investigation of risk factors for further development of de novo arachnoid cysts. Several epidemiological factors in the infants and mothers were analyzed, including gestational age at delivery, mode of delivery, mother's age at delivery, delivery complications, birth weight, age of macrocephaly development, degree of macrocephaly, family history of macrocephaly, prenatal and postnatal history of infection, fontanel status, presence of papilledema, previous history of head trauma, and smoking status. Imaging characteristics of the initial scans, such as location of subdural collection (frontal vs frontoparietal and frontotemporal) and presence of ventriculomegaly, were also evaluated. For those patients in whom arachnoid cysts were identified on subsequent CT scans, the size and location of the cysts were also analyzed.
The authors identified 44 children with benign extracerebral fluid collection in infancy. From this group, over a mean follow-up of 13 months (range 6-13 months), 18 children developed intracranial arachnoid cysts (a 40.9% incidence of de novo development of arachnoid cysts), with 27.8% presenting with bilateral cysts. In the multiple logistic regression analysis, infants who presented with an extracerebral collection restricted to the bilateral frontal region were more likely to develop intracranial arachnoid cysts (p = 0.035) than those with collections involving the frontotemporal and frontoparietal regions (odds ratio [OR] = 5.73). Additionally, children with benign extracerebral fluid collections and plagiocephaly were more likely to develop intracranial arachnoid cysts (p = 0.043) than those without plagiocephaly (OR = 4.96).
This is the first report in the neurosurgical literature demonstrating that benign extracerebral fluid collections in infancy may constitute a significant risk factor for development of de novo arachnoid cysts. These findings support a 2-hit hypothesis for the development of arachnoid cysts, in which the combination of an embryological defect in arachnoid development followed by a second event leading to impairment of CSF fluid absorption in early childhood could lead to abnormal CSF dynamics and the consequent expansion of fluid collections in the intraarachnoid spaces.
颅内蛛网膜囊肿是一种相对常见的颅内良性病变,占非创伤性中枢神经系统病变的0.75% - 1%。尽管已有研究表明蛛网膜囊肿破裂可能导致硬膜下血肿/积液,但迄今为止,尚无研究探讨婴儿期良性脑外积液作为蛛网膜囊肿进一步发展的可能诱发因素。
作者对2003年至2010年在OSF圣弗朗西斯医疗中心接受神经外科治疗的12个月及以下的巨头症婴儿进行了回顾性影像学和病历审查,这些婴儿在薄层(1毫米)头部CT扫描中被诊断为婴儿期良性脑外积液。特别关注了新发蛛网膜囊肿进一步发展的危险因素调查。分析了婴儿和母亲的几个流行病学因素,包括分娩时的孕周、分娩方式、母亲分娩年龄、分娩并发症、出生体重、巨头症发展年龄、巨头症程度、巨头症家族史、产前和产后感染史、囟门状态、视乳头水肿情况、既往头部外伤史和吸烟状况。还评估了初始扫描的影像学特征,如硬膜下积液的位置(额叶与额顶叶和额颞叶)和脑室扩大情况。对于那些在后续CT扫描中发现蛛网膜囊肿的患者,也分析了囊肿的大小和位置。
作者确定了44例婴儿期良性脑外积液患儿。在这组患儿中,平均随访13个月(范围6 - 13个月),18例患儿发展为颅内蛛网膜囊肿(新发蛛网膜囊肿的发生率为40.9%),其中27.8%为双侧囊肿。在多因素logistic回归分析中,与脑外积液累及额颞叶和额顶叶区域的婴儿相比,脑外积液局限于双侧额叶区域的婴儿更易发展为颅内蛛网膜囊肿(P = 0.035)(比值比[OR] = 5.73)。此外,与无扁头畸形的患儿相比,患有良性脑外积液和扁头畸形的患儿更易发展为颅内蛛网膜囊肿(P = 0.043)(OR = 4.96)。
这是神经外科文献中的首例报告,表明婴儿期良性脑外积液可能是新发蛛网膜囊肿发展的重要危险因素。这些发现支持了蛛网膜囊肿发展的二次打击假说,即蛛网膜发育的胚胎学缺陷与导致幼儿脑脊液吸收受损的第二个事件相结合,可能导致脑脊液动力学异常以及蛛网膜下腔积液的相应扩大。