Successfull Management of a Life Threatening Cerebellar Haemorrhage Following Spine Surgery - A Case Report -
Article information
Abstract
Cerebellar haemorrhages are rare life-threatening complications following spine surgery that present challenges for their diagnostic and their therapeutic management. Their patho-physiology remains unclear.
We report a case of a life-threatening cerebellar haemorrhage secondary to an occult dural tear following a planned L5-S1 laminectomy. The patient was treated with emergent external ventriculostomy following by a posterior fossa decompressive craniectomy. Cerebellar haemorrhages have to be suspected systematically when unexpected neurological signs occur after spine surgery since their rapid management lead to favourable outcomes. The present imaging findings allow us proposing that cerebellar haemorrhages result primarily from superior cerebellar venous stretching and tearing, and that cerebellar infarction and swelling occur secondarily.
Introduction
Spine surgery is associated with a wide range of complications, including dural tears that lead to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakages1,2. Cerebellar haemorrhages (CH) are extremely rare and dramatic complications following spine surgery that seem to result from peroperative and/or postoperative CSF leakages. We report a case of a life threatening CH after lumbar spine surgery associated with an occult dural tear requiring emergent neurosurgical management. We discuss the possible mechanisms underlying such a condition and highlight the need to perform systematically a cranial computerized tomography (CT-scan) when unexpected neurological signs occur after spine surgery.
Case Report
A 73-year-old woman, without past medical history, was found to have a symptomatic degenerative spondylolisthesis at L5-S1 associated with spinal canal stenosis. The patient underwent a planned L5-S1 laminectomy and fusion with pedicle screws in prone position using a posterior approach in an outside institution (day 0). No dural tear or CSF leak was identified preoperatively and a percutaneous drain was placed. The patient had no arterial hypertension during the perioperative period and the drain, opened under gravity, drained an abundant and clear serosanguinous fluid. At day 3, the drain was obturated and the patient was allowed to stand and walk. She then developed severe headaches and confusion, and her clinical status suddenly deteriorated with a loss of consciousness. Emergent CT-scan demonstrated an acute cerebellar haemorrhage in the superior folia of the cerebellar hemispheres, an obstructive hydrocephalus and a diffuse pneumocephalus (Fig. 1). The patient was referred emergently to our institution with a Glasgow Coma Scale at 7 requiring intubation, and no focal neurological signs. Emergent external ventriculostomy was performed and drain was removed (day 3). The CSF pressure, approximated during surgery was about 15 to 18 cm of water. Postoperatively, the patient was transferred to intensive care. The ventricular catheter was placed with an opening pressure of 15 cm of water, and antiedema treatment was administered (4 mg intravenous dexamethasone every 6 h, 100 mg 20% mannitol every 6 h). The level of consciousness did not improve and a 48-hour postoperative CT-scan demonstrated an increased edema of the posterior fossa associated with upward and downward herniations of the cerebellum (day 5). A posterior fossa decompressive craniectomy with a large duraplasty was then performed. At day 7, the level of consciousness improved but clear fluid began leaking from the lumbar incision. Surgical exploration identified a 8-mm dural tear at the caudal aspect of the previous laminectomy. The patient fully recovered consciousness, and was neurologically intact. Both incisions healed, and the external ventriculostomy was removed at day 10. Control CT-scan, performed one week later, demonstrated a complete resorption of the haemorrhage and a regression of posterior fossa oedema and hydrocephalus (Fig. 2). The patient was then discharged with a normal neurological examination at day 17. At 6 months of follow-up, the patient had a normal neurological examination.
Discussion
Cerebellar haemorrhages are rare and dramatic complications following spine surgery and few cases have been published, since the first description3. In all of the documented cases, CH have occurred in patients with dural tear and CSF leak, whether occult or not, and the onset of neurological symptoms has been reported more than ten hours after surgery, as in the present one2,4.
It is thus admitted that peroperative and/or postoperative CSF losses, leading to intracranial hypotension, represent the main contributing factor in CH2,5,6. In the present case, two facts support the main role of intracranial hypotension in the setting of CH: 1) neurological symptoms appeared when the patient was allowed to stand up and walk, while the drains were still opened and; 2) peroperatively, during ventriculostomy, the observed CSF pressure was very low. Of note, no other aetiology, such as the use of anticoagulants, high arterial blood pressure and underlying intracranial vascular abnormalities, could explain such a complication in the present case and no correlations were found in literature between CH and age, sex, pathology operated or type of surgery performed7,8. The time of CH was in the range of previous reported cases (16-120 hours, median 16)7,8.
The exact patho-physiology of CH is however still controversial. If a venous origin is widely admitted, the exact mechanisms remains discussed. It has been suggested that a transient stretching and occlusion of superior cerebellar veins, resulting from downward cerebellar displacement in a situation of intracranial hypotension, may lead to cerebellar haemorrhagic infarction6,9. It has also been suggested that cerebellar sag, can directly cause a tearing and bleeding of superior cerebellar veins6. The mechanism of venous infarction was debated due to the lack of typical imaging findings6. In the present case, the first CTscan showed an acute cerebellar haemorrhage and surrounding edema. Diffuse cerebellar swelling occurred on the second CT-scan, concomitantly to the clinical deterioration. We can thus hypothesize that CH results primarily from superior cerebellar venous stretching and tearing, and that cerebellar infarction and swelling occur secondarily. We can also hypothesize that both mechanisms may co-exist.
Therefore, as a practical consequence, we recommend suspecting systematically CH when unexpected neurological signs occur after spine surgery, since rapid diagnosis and management lead to a favourable outcome of this life-threatening complication.