CSF Flashcards
1
Q
List causes of increased CSF pressure
A
- Changes in systemic blood pressure
- Space occupying mass (tumour, abscess)
- Secondary to trauma/hypoxic injury (haemorrhage, oedema)
- Hypercapnoea (increases cerebral blood flow therefore CSF pressure; may exacerbate cerebral oedema)
- Inflammation, especially of the arachnoid villi (reduced absorption of CSF)
- Venous compression increases blood volume in the cranial cavity and compression of the CSF space thus increasing CSF pressure (iatrogenic or post jugular thrombosis)
2
Q
List causes of xanthochromia
A
- Haemorrhage (usually previous)
- Inflammation
- Increased protein
- Direct bilirubin leakage
- Leakage of indirect bilirubin across a damaged BBB
3
Q
List common changes to CSF cytology and possible causes (broad categories rather than specific diseases)
A
- Increased large mononuclear cells: diseases of axonal degeneration, some encephalitis viruses (EEEV [also some neutropils], WEEV, WNV [primarily lymphocytes], Kunjin [also some neutrophils])
- Increased neutrophils: Encephalomyelitis, bacterial meningitis, parasitism, any disease with extensive inflammation
- Increased eosinophils: Severe parasitic disease.
- Increased lactate: EEEV, trauma, brain abscess (may be the only abnormality of CSF with a brain abscess)