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We report seven patients with the syndrome of intracranial hypotension who were referred to Memorial Sloan-Kettering,primarily because of suspicion of meningeal tumor or infection raised by the findings of meningeal enhancement on MRI.In three patients,symptoms occurred after lumbar puncture;in four,there was no clear precipitating event.Lumbar puncture after MRI in six patients revealed low CSF pressure(six patients)and pleocytosis or high protein,or both(four patients).Three patients had subdural effusions.Six patients had measurable descent of the brain on midsagittal images.Postural headache resolved in all seven patients,six of whom had followup MRIs.Meningeal enhancement resolved or diminished in all six.Subdural effusions resolved spontaneously in two and were evacuated (but were not under pressure)in one.Downward brain displacement improved or resolved in all patients.The clinical syndrome and MRI abnormalities generally resolve on their own.An extensive workup is not helpful and may be misleading.Patients should be treated symptomatically. |
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CAT scan CAT scan,abnormal cerebrospinal fluid cerebrospinal fluid,abnormal cerebrospinal fluid,elevated protein of cerebrospinal fluid,pressure low cough gadolinium head injury headache headache,positional headache,post traumatic intracranial hypotension lumbar puncture lumbar puncture,complications of meningeal enhancement MRI MRI,abnormal MRI,contrast enhanced myelogram myelogram,complications of nausea and vomiting pleocytosis of cerebrospinal fluid primary intracranial hypotension spinal headache subdural effusion trauma treatment of neurologic disorder
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