The authors report a prospective, randomized 18-month study on the effect of prophylactic antibiotic treatment in 152 hydrocephalic patients in whom clean shunt operations or revisions were done. The treated group received methicillin (totally 200 mg/kg) divided into six i.v. doses during 24 hours starting at the induction of anesthesia. Patients allergic to penicillin received erythromycin instead. Seventy-nine patients received antibiotics, and 73 (the control group) received none. All patients were followed at least 6 months after operation or to their death. Eleven patients developed signs of infection, giving an overall infection rate of 7.2%; however, the infection occurred less than 1 month after the operation in only half of these. Six of the patients had septicemia, 4 had peritonitis, and 1 had meningitis. In the treated group, the infection rate was 8.9%; in the control group, the rate was 5.5%. There was no statistically significant difference. The prophylactic antibiotic regimen in this investigation did not reduce the infection rate connected with cerebrospinal fluid shunting procedures.
Four patients aged 11, 11, 8 and 18 years, shunted in early childhood for hydrocephalus, were followed in the outpatient clinic for severe headache from 3 months to 2 years. The headache lasted for days and up to a week, was usually severe, and was often followed by screaming attacks or aggressive behavior. In all patients repeated computed tomography disclosed a normal ventricular system or slit ventricles. The intracranial pressure (ICP) was measured in all four patients and showed an increased intracranial steady-state pressure between 20-50 mmHg, plateau waves and, in two of the patients, a very high intracranial pulse-pressure amplitude. At operation all patients had dysfunction of the shunt (most often of the distal end). In three patients ICP monitoring post-operatively showed normal intracranial pressure without any abnormal increments from the normal steady-state pressure. Thus, severe headache can be the only symptom of long-standing shunt dysfunction, even without ventricular dilation. In shunted hydrocephalic children complaining of headaches, ICP measurement is highly recommended.
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