Abstract

Abstract Introduction Post-operative spinal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leaks are a common and potentially serious surgical complication. The management of intra- and post-operative leaks is heterogeneous. Numerous studies advocate for dural repair and CSF diversion. The LiquoGuard7 allows automated and precise CSF pressure and volume control, with the calculation of patient-specific biometrics. We sought to summarize our experience with patient-specific CSF automated drainage with layered spinal wound closure. Methods This single-centre case series included patients undergoing complex spinal surgery where: 1) a high-flow intra- and/or postoperative CSF leak was expected and 2) concurrent CSF diversion was performed via lumbar drain attached to a LiquoGuard7®. CSF diversion was tailored to calculated CSF production rates and other case factors to maintain a neutral pressure across the operative site. Results Three patients were included, with a variety of pathologies (T7/T8 disc prolapse; T8-T9; T4-T5 metastatic spinal cord compression). The first two patients underwent CSF diversion to prevent post-op CSF leak, whilst case 3 required this in response to post-op CSF leak. CSF hyperproduction (140-150ml/hr) was evident in all cases. With patient-specific CSF diversion regimes, no cases required further intervention for CSF fistulae repair (including for pleural CSF effusion), wound breakdown or infection. Conclusion Automated patient-specific cerebrospinal fluid drainage may have a role in the closure of complex spinal wounds with high-flow CSF leaks, with a smaller risk profile than traditional manual drainage. Further larger studies are needed to explore the comparative benefits and cost-effectiveness of these devices.

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