Mayo Clinic, Headache Division, Department of Neurology, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
Mayo Clinic, Department of Neurology, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
Cephalalgia. 2019 Dec;39(14):1847-1854. doi: 10.1177/0333102419881673. Epub 2019 Oct 9.
Cerebrospinal fluid-venous fistula is an uncommon cause of spontaneous spinal cerebrospinal fluid leak (SSCSFL). We aim to describe the clinical presentation, imaging evaluation, treatment and outcome of SSCSFL secondary to cerebrospinal fluid-venous fistula.
A retrospective review was undertaken of SSCSFL cases secondary to cerebrospinal fluid-venous fistula confirmed radiologically or intraoperatively, seen at our institution from January 1994 to March 2019. Cases with undetermined SSCSFL etiology, alternative etiology or unconfirmed fistula were excluded.
Forty-four of 156 patients met the inclusion criteria (31 women, 13 men). Mean age of symptom onset was 52.6 years (SD 8.7, range 33-71 years). Headache was the presenting symptom in almost all, typically daily (69%), and most often in occipital/suboccipital regions. Headache character was most commonly pressure (38%), followed by throbbing/pulsing (21.4%). Orthostatic headache worsening occurred in 69% and an even greater percentage of patients (88%) reported Valsalva-induced headache exacerbation or precipitation. Headache occurred in isolation to Valsalva maneuvers in 12%. Of 37 patients with documented cerebrospinal fluid opening pressure, 13% were <6 cmHO; 84%, 7-20 cmHO; and one, 25 cmHO. Fistulas were almost exclusively thoracic (95.5%). Only one patient responded definitively to epidural blood patch (EBP). Forty-two patients underwent surgery. Most improved following surgery; 48.7% were completely headache free and 26.8% had at least 50% improvement.
In our series, cerebrospinal fluid-venous fistula was associated with a greater occurrence of Valsalva-induced headache exacerbation or precipitation than orthostatic headache and did not respond to EBP. Surgery provided significant improvement. Cerebrospinal fluid-venous fistula should be considered early in the differential diagnosis of Valsalva-induced ("cough") headache.
脑脊髓液静脉瘘是自发性脊髓脑脊髓液漏(SSCSFL)的罕见原因。我们旨在描述经影像学或手术证实的脑脊髓液静脉瘘继发 SSCSFL 的临床表现、影像学评估、治疗和结局。
回顾性分析了 1994 年 1 月至 2019 年 3 月我院收治的经影像学或手术证实的脑脊髓液静脉瘘继发 SSCSFL 病例,排除了 SSCSFL 病因不明、替代病因或未证实瘘管的病例。
在 156 例患者中,有 44 例符合纳入标准(31 例女性,13 例男性)。症状发作的平均年龄为 52.6 岁(标准差 8.7,范围 33-71 岁)。几乎所有患者均以头痛为首发症状,典型表现为每日头痛(69%),且多数位于枕部/枕下部。头痛特征最常见为压迫感(38%),其次为搏动性/脉冲性(21.4%)。69%的患者头痛在直立位时加重,88%的患者报告称valsalva 动作可使头痛加重或诱发头痛。12%的患者头痛与valsalva 动作无关。在有记录的脑脊液开放压的 37 例患者中,13%<6cmH2O;84%为 7-20cmH2O;1 例为 25cmH2O。瘘管几乎全部位于胸段(95.5%)。仅有 1 例患者硬膜外血贴(EBP)治疗有效。42 例患者接受了手术。大多数患者术后症状改善,48.7%完全无头痛,26.8%头痛至少改善 50%。
在我们的研究中,与直立性头痛相比,脑脊髓液静脉瘘与更多的 valsalva 动作诱发的头痛加重或诱发有关,并且对 EBP 无反应。手术可显著改善症状。脑脊髓液静脉瘘应在 valsalva 动作诱发的(“咳嗽”)头痛的鉴别诊断中早期考虑。