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We performed a multicenter retrospective study in 166 consecutive patients shunted for presumed normal-pressure hydrocephalus(NPH)in the four neurosurgical departments of Amsterdam.Overall improvement occurred in 36%;substantial improvement in 21%.In the subgroup of idiopathic NPH(N= 127),marked improvement was only 15%.The incidence of shunt-responsive NPH in our area was 2.2/million/year.The rate of severe and moderate shunt- related complications was 28%,leading to death or severe residual morbidity in 7%.The substantial benefit/serious harm ratio in the whole group was only three(21%/7%),decreasing to 1.7 in idiopathic NPH.By excluding patients at high surgical risk,this ratio might have risen to 10 in the whole group and to six in idiopathic NPH.Our experience is much less favorable than that encountered in the literature,reporting overall improvement in 74%and marked improvement in 55%of the shunted patients.We conclude that NPH is probably a very rare and still overdiagnosed syndrome and that the overall morbidity rate for each patient demonstrating meaningful improvement is high. |
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bacterial infection central nervous system,infection of cerebrovascular accident dementia gait disorder hydrocephalus hydrocephalus,normal pressure hydrocephalus,treatment of intellectual deterioration intracerebral hemorrhage intracranial infection mortality neurologic complications of,surgery seizure shunt procedure,ventricular shunt procedure,ventricular-complications of subdural hematoma treatment of neurologic disorder urinary incontinence
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