The incidence of cryptococcosis has risen sharply together with the growing number of patients with Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS). Cryptococcal meningitis is nowadays the most common intracranial non-viral infection in such cases. One of its most serious complications is intracranial hypertension (ICH), a situation that can lead either to early death, or disabling sequelae. The authors analyse a series of 10 cases of encephalic cryptococcosis with ICH, and describe the clinical course, diagnosis, medical and surgical treatment, and evolution. The physiopathology of ICH in these patients is discussed, proposing placement of a ventriculo-peritoneal shunt as the primary and emergency treatment, even when ventricular enlargement might be absent. Although the present series is certainly small, from the preceding discussion and according to an extensive bibliographical review, our conclusion is that patients with encephalic cryptococcosis and uncontrollable ICH should receive surgical treatment, consisting of an emergency diversion of the CSF, because serial lumbar punctures are not enough to improve the clinical course, that if left to its natural evolution would lead to a fatal outcome in a short time. In spite of the fact that CSF shunts were carried out on immunocompromised patients, no superinfections occurred.
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