Intracranial venous thrombosis Flashcards

1
Q

What is the most common venous sinus thrombosis

A

Sagittal sinus thrombosis or transverse sinus thrombosis

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2
Q

Describe the symptom onset of dural venous sinus thrombosis

A

Several days or weeks

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3
Q

Describe the features of sagittal sinus thrombosis

A
Headache
Vomiting 
Seizures
Decreased vision
Papilloedema
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4
Q

Describe the features of transverse sinus thrombosis

A
Headache 
Mastoid pain 
Focal CNS signs
Seizures
Papilloedema
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5
Q

Describe the features of sigmoid sinus thrombosis

A

Cerebellar signs

Lower cranial nerve palsies

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6
Q

Describe the features of inferior petrosal sinus thrombosis

A

5th and 6th cranial nerve palsies with temporal and retro-orbital pain

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7
Q

Describe cavernous sinus thrombosis

A

Often due to spread from facial pustules or folliculitis causing headache, Chemosis, oedematous eyelids, proptosis, painful ophthalmoplegia, fever

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8
Q

Describe cortical vein thrombosis

A

Usually occurs with sinus thrombosis as it extends into the cortical veins, causing infarction in a venous territory. These infarcts give rise to stroke like focal symptoms that develop over days. Often seizures and are associated with headache which may come on suddenly

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9
Q

List the causes of intracranial venous thrombosis

A
Numerous - any hypercoagulable state causes 
Pregnancy/puerperium
COCP
Head injury
Dehydration 
Blood dyscrasis
Tumours
Extracranial malignancy 
Recent LP
Drugs - antifibrinolytics, androgens
Infection
SLE
Vasculitis 
Crohns
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10
Q

What is the differential diagnosis for an intracranial venous thrombosis

A
Subarachnoid haemorrhage
Meningitis 
Encephalitis
Intracranial abscess
Arterial infarction
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11
Q

What investigations should be done for intracranial venous thrombosis

A

Exclude subarachnoid haemorrhage
Bloods - thrombophilia screen
Imaging - CT/MRI venography may show absence of a sinus though an absent transverse sinus can be a normal variant
MRI T2 weighted gradient echo sequences can visualise thrombus directly and also haemorrhagic infarction
CT may be normal early but show a filling defect in a week
LP - raised opening pressure, CSF normal or show RBCs and xanthochromia

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12
Q

Describe the management of intracranial venous thrombosis

A

Seek expert help early
Anticoagulation with heparin or LMWH and then warfarin (INR 2-3 weeks) may benefit even if there is secondary cerebral haemorrhage
If there is deterioration despite adequate anticoagulation, endovascular thrombolysis or mechanical thrombectomy may provide limited benefit
Increased ICP requires prompt attention, decompressive hemicraniectomy may prevent impending herniation

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