Romanian Journal of Military Medicine (Jun 2014)

News and Perspectives on Treatment of Normal Pressure Internal Hydrocephalus

  • Cristian Năstase,
  • Marian Mitrică,
  • Cristian Popescu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. CXVII, no. 1-2
pp. 24 – 32

Abstract

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Many patients, usually over 60 years old, presenting presenile dementia associated with marked gait disorders, impaired balance, urinary incontinence, have been shown to have enlarged ventricles associated with relatively small cortical atrophy. Intracranial pressure monitoring indicates normal values, or subject to only minor peaks, usually at night. Because some of these patients improve markedly after ventricular shunting procedures it has been suggested that their neurological dysfunction may be caused by a pressure effect on the brain from the increased internal surface of the ventricles. Many of these patients do benefit from surgery, and a lot of them have a history of subarachnoid hemorrhage, traumatic brain injury or meningitis which might have impaired the CSF absorption.