J Korean Neurosurg Soc.  2004 Jul;36(1):18-23.

Influence of Routine Intraoperative Ventricular Drainage on the Incidence of Aneurysmal Rebleeding

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neurosurgery, Hanyang University Guri Hospital, Guri, Korea. kjm2323@hanyang.ac.kr
  • 2Department of Neurosurgery, Hanyang University Hospital, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract


OBJECTIVE
Although there are several risk factors to which related intraoperative aneurymal bleeding, the relationship between ventricular drainage to aneurysmal rebleeding is still controversial. We investigate to define the relationship of an immediate ventricular drainage after craniotomies in predissection stage rerupture of aneurysms. METHODS: Randomized prospective and retrospective analyses were performed on 197 consecutive patients with confirmed aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage(SAH) who underwent aneurysmal clipping in acute stage during 5 years. The aneurysmal SAH patients were divided into two groups according to the use of intraoperative ventricular cerebrospinal fluid(CSF) drainage. Various variables including Hunt-Hess grade, Fisher grade, Glasgow coma scale, Glasgow outcome scale, location of aneurysms, and the presence of a "daughter" aneurysm and hydrocephalus were analyzed.
RESULTS
Regardless the drained CSF amount, the incidence of the intraoperative aneurysmal rerupture in predissection stage during aneurysmal clipping has not showed any difference in both groups. Depending on the presence of the acute hydrocephalus, the rerupture incidence in dissection stage during aneurysmal surgery was not statistically significant. However, the frequency of rebleeding in patients with ventriculostomy(66% of 24) was significantly higher than in hydrocephalic patients without ventriculostomy(25% of 27) and patients without acute hydrocephalus(22% of 110).
CONCLUSION
Routine intraoperative ventricular drainage does not increase the incidence of aneurysmal rebleeding and the more extensive arachnoid dissection is not necessary even during an early surgery. Moreover, it obtains an adequate intraoperative brain relaxation, which resulted in the decrease of retraction injury.

Keyword

Rerupture; Drainage; Ventricular; Aneurysm; Subarachnoid hemorrhage

MeSH Terms

Aneurysm*
Arachnoid
Brain
Craniotomy
Drainage*
Glasgow Coma Scale
Glasgow Outcome Scale
Hemorrhage
Humans
Hydrocephalus
Incidence*
Prospective Studies
Relaxation
Retrospective Studies
Risk Factors
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
Full Text Links
  • JKNS
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr