Abstract

Numerous studies have shown that continuous lumbar drainage (LD) reduces spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH)-related complications, decreasing the incidence of cerebral vasospasm, delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI), and hydrocephalus in patients treated with coiling or clipping, but performing LD before securing the aneurysm is still controversial. Our hospital has been implementing prompt LD for several years, and we present the results in this paper. Between January 2014 and December 2020, a total of 438 patients with SAH were included in this retrospective study. The indication for prompt LD was aneurysmal SAH of modified Fisher grade III or higher without dense intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH) with obstructive hydrocephalus requiring extraventricular drainage (EVD) or large intracranial hemorrhage requiring immediate decompression. Prompt LD was performed for 229 SAH patients, and the control group included 209 patients. We compared in-hospital mortality and vasospasm or hydrocephalus occurrence and procedure-related complications between the two groups. The in-hospital mortality rate was 7.4% for patients with prompt LD and 14.4% for patients without LD, and the difference was significant(p=0.019). Vasospasm occurred in 10% of patients with prompt LD and 16.7% of controls(p=0.039). Hydrocephalus requiring EVD occurred in 10.9% of the LD group and 28.7% of the control group(p<0.001). Rebleeding occurrence was 3.1% in the prompt LD group and 5.7% in the non-LD group(p=0.168). Cerebrospinal fluid infection occurred in 0.4% of the prompt LD group and 1.4% of controls(p=0.272). Prompt LD is a feasible option for treating selective aneurysmal SAH patients.

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