Abstract
A case involving a 29-year-old female patient with a known case of hypothyroidism at 38 weeks gestation. She developed a fronto-occipital, postural type of headache. This ensued on the second postoperative day after undergoing an unintended dural puncture with the introducer needle during spinal anesthesia for an elective cesarean section. It was initially treated as a post-dural puncture headache until she developed generalized tonic–clonic seizures the next day. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain exhibited features of posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES). With anticonvulsants and antibiotics, the neurological symptoms subsided, and the patient was discharged home symptom-free. We call attention to the importance of suspecting PRES in obstetric cases with an inadvertent dural puncture in a normotensive patient. Neuroimaging plays a crucial role in making a diagnosis of headaches, especially during the peripartum period. Lastly, keeping in view, the potential medicolegal implications in such cases, further research seems vital, especially in the Asian population.
Published Version
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