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      Pneumocephalus after surgical evacuation of chronic subdural hematoma: Is it a serious complication?

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          Abstract

          Background:

          Pneumocephalus is commonly encountered after surgical evacuation of chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH). This study was done to study the incidence, clinical presentation, and management of patients who developed pneumocephalus after surgical evacuation of CSDH.

          Materials and Methods:

          This prospective study was carried out on consecutive 50 patients who had received surgical treatment for CSDH. All the patients included were followed-up postoperatively with regular clinical and computed tomography (CT) examinations immediately postoperatively, before discharge, and 2 months after surgery. Pneumocephalus was classified into simple and tension, based upon the clinical and radiological criteria. The neurologic grading system of Markwalder et al was used to evaluate the surgical results.

          Results:

          The immediate postoperative CT scan showed pneumocephalus in 22 patients (44%). Tension pneumocephalus was found in two patients who did not require any further surgery. There was statistically significant increase in the incidence of pneumocephalus (immediate and postoperative) in the patients aged over 60 years as well as those presenting with a midline shift more than 5 mm in their CT scan. With regard to the 22 cases of pneumocephalus, good postoperative results were found in 16 patients (73%), while bad results were found in 6 patients (27%). No statistically significant difference in the outcome between patients who had pneumocephalus after surgery and those who had not.

          Conclusion:

          Pneumocephalus after surgical evacuation of CSDH is a common finding in the immediate CT scan as well as at time of discharge. Tension pneumocephalus may not require surgical intervention and simple aspiration of air using a syringe may be sufficient.

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          Most cited references38

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          Chronic subdural haematoma: surgical treatment and outcome in 1000 cases.

          Chronic subdural haematoma (CSDH) is one of the most common clinical entities in daily neurosurgical practice. To evaluate the clinical features, computed tomography findings, surgical results, and complications our series was statistically analysed to elucidate the factors affecting the post-operative outcome. A retrospective study (1980-2002) of the records of 1000 patients harbouring 1097 chronic subdural haematoma treated with burr-hole craniotomy with closed-system drainage was carried out. The series included 628 males and 372 females, age range 12-100 years, mean age 72.7+/-11.4 years. The mean interval from trauma to appearance of clinical symptoms was 49.1+/-7.4 days (15-751). The principal symptom was headache (29.7%) in the over 70s, and behavioural disturbance (33.8%) in the under 70s. The CSDH was right sided in 432 patients, left sided in 471, and bilateral in the remaining 97 cases. Post-operative complications occurred in 196 patients and 21 patients died in hospital. Poor prognosis was related to patient's age (>70) and clinical grade on admission (grades 0-2 versus grades 3-4).
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            The course of chronic subdural hematomas after burr-hole craniostomy and closed-system drainage.

            A consecutive series of 32 adult patients with chronic subdural hematoma was studied in respect to postoperative cerebral reexpansion (reduction in diameter of the subdural space) after burr-hole craniostomy and closed-system drainage. Patients with high subdural pressure showed the most rapid brain expansion and clinical improvement during the first 2 days. Nevertheless, a computerized tomography (CT) scan performed on the 10th day after surgery demonstrated persisting subdural fluid in 78% of cases. After 40 days, the CT scan was normal in 27 of the 32 patients. There was no mortality and no significant morbidity. Our study suggests that well developed subdural neomembranes are the crucial factors for cerebral reexpansion, a phenomenon that takes at least 10 to 20 days. However, blood vessel dysfunction and impairment of cerebral blood flow may participate in delay of brain reexpansion. It may be argued that additional surgical procedures, such as repeated tapping of the subdural fluid, craniotomy, and membranectomy or even craniectomy, should not be evaluated earlier than 20 days after the initial surgical procedure unless the patient has deteriorated markedly.
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              The incidence of pneumocephalus after supratentorial craniotomy. Observations on the disappearance of intracranial air.

              Pneumocephalus occurs in a variety of clinical settings and has important anesthetic implications, particularly if N2O is used. One common cause of pneumocephalus is a craniotomy or craniectomy, and therefore, patients undergoing these neurosurgical procedures may be at increased risk for the development of tension pneumocephalus if N2O is used during a subsequent anesthetic. However, because the rate at which a postoperative pneumocephalus resolves has not been well defined, the duration of this risk period is unknown. Department of Anesthesia billing codes were used to identify all patients undergoing supratentorial craniotomy between 1986 and 1990. This list was cross-indexed with Department of Radiology data to generate a list of patients who had had a computed tomographic scan of the head performed on or after the day of their surgery. From this list, 240 scans were examined for the presence of intracranial air. The magnitude of pneumocephalus, if present, was ranked as large, moderate, small, or trace. Air was seen in all scans obtained in the first 2 post-operative days. Sixty-six percent of these pneumocephali were judged to be moderate or large. The incidence of pneumocephalus decreased to 75% by postoperative day 7. During the 2nd and 3rd postoperative weeks, the incidence of pneumocephalus decreased to 59.6 and 26.3%, respectively. The size of the pneumocephali also decreased. Still, 11.8% of the scans obtained during the 2nd postoperative week had pneumocephali that were judged to be moderate or large. These data indicate that all patients have pneumocephalus immediately after a supratentorial craniotomy. Although the incidence and size of pneumocephali decrease over time, a significant number of patients have an intracranial air collection large enough to put them at risk for complication if N2O is used during a second anesthetic in the first 3 weeks after the first procedure. This information should be considered in the evaluation of the patient and in the selection of anesthetic agents.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Asian J Neurosurg
                Asian J Neurosurg
                AJNS
                Asian Journal of Neurosurgery
                Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd (India )
                1793-5482
                2248-9614
                Apr-Jun 2012
                : 7
                : 2
                : 66-74
                Affiliations
                [1]Department of Neurosurgery, Faculty of medicine, Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt
                Author notes
                Address for correspondence: Dr. Zidan Ihab, Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria University, Champillion st, Elazaritta, 21131, Alexandria, Egypt. E-mail: zidanihab@ 123456yahoo.fr
                Article
                AJNS-7-66
                10.4103/1793-5482.98647
                3410163
                22870154
                a832ccdb-c70e-4dc1-8053-3c607e196e4e
                Copyright: © Asian Journal of Neurosurgery

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                Categories
                Original Article

                Surgery
                surgical evacuation,simple pneumocephalus,tension pneumocephalus,chronic subdural hematoma

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