Abstract

The basis of successful 3rd ventriculostomy in cases of communicating hydrocephalus is not yet understood. We performed 3rd ventriculostomies in 5 patients with free cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) communication from the ventricles to the cisterna magna. Preoperative magnetic resonance images (MRIs) showed dilated ventricles, a downward bulging floor of the 3rd ventricle (interpreted as a sign of pressure gradient between the ventricles and basal cisterns) and a free communication to an enlarged cisterna magna. The other basal cisterns were of normal or smaller size. All patients recovered from their clinical symptoms and none of them needed a shunt. The hypothesis of an intracisternal CSF pathway obstruction (e.g. between the cisterna magna and the prepontine cistern) could explain the MRI findings, although such an obstruction cannot be directly visualized. It would also explain the successful 3rd ventriculostomies in these cases.

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