Hydrocephalus after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage is a significant complication that affects patient outcomes. The prognosis depends on multiple factors, including the severity of the hemorrhage, patient characteristics, and the need for long-term cerebrospinal fluid diversion.
Factor | Better Prognosis | Worse Prognosis |
---|---|---|
WFNS Grade | I–III | IV–V |
Fisher Grade | I–II | III–IV |
Hydrocephalus Type | Reversible (EVD weaned) | Chronic (VP shunt needed) |
Age | <60 years | >60 years |
Comorbidities | Minimal | Multiple (HTN, diabetes, etc.) |
Treatment | Early CSF diversion | Delayed CSF diversion |
Hydrocephalus after aSAH can significantly impact mortality and functional recovery. However, early recognition and intervention with EVD and/or VP shunt placement can improve outcomes. Patients with high-grade SAH, extensive blood burden, and delayed intervention have worse prognoses, while those with successful CSF management and fewer complications may recover to an independent functional status.
Hydrocephalus leads to prolonged hospital and ICU stays, well as to repeated surgical interventions, readmissions, and complications associated with ventriculoperitoneal shunts, including shunt failure and shunt infection. Whether variations in surgical technique at the time of aneurysm treatment may modify rates of shunt dependency remains a matter of debate 1).
The indication for and the timing of a permanent shunt operation in patients following acute hydrocephalus (HC) after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) remains controversial because risk factors for chronic HC fail to predict permanent shunt dependency. The amount of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drained via an external ventricular drain (EVD) may predict shunt dependency.
Results suggest that the daily amount of external CSF drainage volume in the acute state of SAH might influence the development of HC 2).
CSF IL-6 values of ≥10,000 pg/ml in the early post-SAH period may be a useful diagnostic tool for predicting shunt dependency in patients with acute posthemorrhagic hydrocephalus. The development of shunt-dependent posthemorrhagic hydrocephalus remains a multifactorial process 3).
Reliable prognostic tools to estimate the case fatality rate (CFR) and the development of chronic hydrocephalus (CHC) in aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) are not well defined.
Graeb Score or LeRoux score improve the prediction of shunt dependency and in parts of CFR in aneurysmal SAH patients therefore confirming the relevance of the extent and distribution of intraventricular blood for the clinical course in SAH 4).