NEUROLOGY / NEUROSURGERY Flashcards

1
Q

CT for SAH

A

Diagnostic sensitivity and time since symptom onset

•90 - 96% sensitive overall

•< 6 hours - reported as 100%

  • has a 95% chance of being > 98%
  • based on consultant radiologist reporting
  • specificity > 99.5%

•< 12 hours 98-100%

-95% chance of being > 94%

•< 24 hours 92-95%

•< 48 hours 80-86%

•> 72 hours 75%

•> 1 week 50%

•therefore a normal result after 6 hours may not exclude diagnosis

Decreased sensitivity when

  • few clinical signs present
  • small aneurysm
  • Hb < 10 g/dL
  • inexperienced radiologist

-approximately half of ‘missed’ SAH on CT is detected by more experienced radiologists

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2
Q

LP for SAH

A

Lumbar puncture

Investigation without CT

•CT generally recommended prior to LP in patients being evaluated for possible SAH

-however neuroimaging may not be immediately available

•ACEP and British Society of Neurological Surgeons believe LP may be performed without prior CT when

  • normal mentation present
  • no neck stiffness
  • no focal findings or signs or raised ICP
  • CT not readily available

LP not indicated

•in normal risk patients if a high quality CT scan has been performed within 6 hours of symptom onset and reported as negative

  • approximately 2000 LPs would need to be performed to detect a single true positive result
  • not performing LP in scans obtained up to 12 hours is also reasonable

LP may be indicated

•very high risk patients (previous SAH, PCK, multiple relatives with SAH)

  • the risk of harm from LP is estimated to be greater than the potential benefit in suspected SAH unless the post CT probability of SAH is > 4%
  • this may apply to a patient with a much higher than average pre CT probability of SAH (normally 5-10% pre CT)
  • CT performed > 6-12 hours after symptom onset
  • if other diagnoses diagnosed by LP are being considered
  • meningitis
  • benign intracranial hypertension

•LP may not detect other potentially serious causes of headache, e.g., carotid / vertebral dissection

Blood

  • > 100,000 RBCs indicative of SAH
  • > 10,000 RBCs
  • present in > 90% of cases
  • LR+ 6
  • > 2,000 RBCs and/or visual xanthochromia is close to 100% sensitive
  • < 100 RBCs rare
  • < 65% change in counts between 1st and 3rd tube LR+ 3.6
  • > 65% change in counts LR- 0.10
  • however differentiation from a traumatic tap may be extremely difficult

Traumatic tap

  • traumatic tap occurs in 20% of LP’s
  • traumatic tap and SAH may co-exist
  • none of the following criteria are 100% accurate
  • normal CSF pressure
  • clearing of blood in tubes 1-3 / marked decrease in RBC count in tubes 1 to 3
  • proportion of white cells to red cells the same as in blood - i.e. RBC:WBC = 500 - 1,000:1
  • clot formation
  • absence of xanthochromia

Xanthochromia

  • xanthochromia should not occur in a bloody tap as the blood has not been exposed to the enzymes in the CSF that breakdown Hb
  • spectrophotometry for detection of CSF bilirubin is slightly more sensitive than visual inspection (85% vs 70%)
  • concerns regarding low specificity of spectrophotometry
  • specificity as low as 35% in one series
  • specificity is approximately 85% for spectrophotometry and closer to 95% for visual inspection
  • however, few hospitals perform formal spectrophotometry - many rely only on visual inspection
  • a systemic review concluded there is insufficient evidence to conclude spectrophotometry is superior to visual inspection
  • other limitations of spectrophotometry
  • time and labour intensive
  • not often performed in smaller centres
  • CSF samples must be wrapped in aluminium foil to protect them from light prior to analysis, otherwise results are invalid

•said to not be present in traumatic tap

-one in vitro study demonstrated early development of xanthochromia in heavily blood stained traumatic taps

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3
Q

SAH - CT Angiography

A

CT angiography

  • widely available
  • may identify aneurysm and negate need for LP
  • 90% sensitive in detecting aneurysms > 3 mm diameter
  • although the aneurysm may be an incidental finding, that may lead to unnecessary investigation

•may also detect

  • AVM
  • carotid or vertebral artery dissection, not seen on plain CT

Limitations

  • 15% of SAHs are due to perimesencephalic haemorrhage so may be missed if CTA used instead of LP
  • does not usually provide any additional information about other causes of headache
  • is usually less cost effective than LP

indications

  • LP is indicted but not able to be performed
  • patient does not consent or prefers CTA
  • technically not possible
  • if cervical vascular dissection is also being considered (neck pain)

-the most common missed diagnosis in patients with suspected SAH

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