Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is a clear, colorless fluid that surrounds the brain and spinal cord. It plays critical roles in mechanical protection, metabolic support, and intracranial pressure regulation.

Component Normal Value
Volume (adult) 140 – 270 mL
Opening pressure 10 – 20 cmH₂O
pH ~7.33
Glucose 45 – 80 mg/dL
Protein 15 – 45 mg/dL
WBC 0 – 5 cells/μL (lymphocytes)
  • Mechanical cushion: protects brain and spinal cord from trauma.
  • Buoyancy: reduces the effective weight of the brain.
  • Metabolic exchange: removes waste and delivers nutrients.
  • Intracranial pressure (ICP) buffer.
  • Immune surveillance.
  1. Produced in the choroid plexus of the lateral, third, and fourth ventricles.
  2. Flows:
    1. Lateral ventricles → Foramina of Monro →
    2. Third ventricle → Aqueduct of Sylvius →
    3. Fourth ventricle → Foramina of Luschka and Magendie →
    4. Subarachnoid space → Arachnoid villi → Superior sagittal sinus.
  • Diagnostic tool for infection, bleeding, or demyelinating disease.
  • Normal pressure: 10–20 cmH₂O in lateral decubitus position.
  • Contraindicated in patients with raised ICP and midline shift.
  • Excess accumulation of CSF.
  • Classified as:
    1. Communicating
    2. Non-communicating (obstructive)
    3. Normal pressure hydrocephalus
  • Types: Ventriculoperitoneal (VP), ventriculoatrial, lumboperitoneal
  • Indications: hydrocephalus, CSF pseudocysts, Dandy-Walker malformation
  • Can be spontaneous or traumatic/post-surgical.
  • Clinical signs: rhinorrhea, otorrhea, low-pressure headache.
  • Diagnosed via beta-2 transferrin test and imaging (CT/MRI cisternography).
  • cerebrospinal_fluid.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/05/27 19:47
  • by administrador