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Papers of the Week


2020 Nov 18


World Neurosurg

Diffuse Calvarial Hyperostosis in Patients with Spontaneous Intracranial Hypotension.

Authors

Johnson DR, Carr CM, Luetmer PH, Diehn FE, Lehman VT, Cutsforth-Gregory JK, Verdoorn JT, Krecke KN
World Neurosurg. 2020 Nov 18.
PMID: 33220476.

Abstract

Diagnosis of spontaneous intracranial hypotension (SIH) may be delayed due to nonspecific symptoms and variable imaging findings. Cases of hyperostosis in children who are overshunted, a process that may be physiologically analogous to adults with SIH, have been reported by others and observed in our practice. The purpose of this retrospective study was to assess the frequency and pattern of calvarial hyperostosis in patients with SIH METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed CT and MRI exams from consecutive patients who underwent myelography for the evaluation of SIH to assess for the presence of generalized calvarial thickening or development of a secondary layer of bone. Patients with typical benign hyperostosis frontalis were excluded. Patient demographics and clinical factors were evaluated for association with hyperostosis RESULTS: Amongst 285 patients with SIH, 40 (14.0%) demonstrated diffuse calvarial hyperostosis on imaging. Most of these patients (32/40; 80.0%) demonstrated a distinct circumferentially layered appearance to the skull, while 8/40 (20.0%) had generalized calvarial thickening without layering CONCLUSIONS: Diffuse calvarial hyperostosis, particularly the concentrically layered form that we term "layer cake skull", is a relatively common imaging feature in patients with SIH. In the appropriate clinical context, this finding will allow the possibility of SIH to be raised based on CT imaging, which is otherwise of limited utility in the initial diagnosis of this condition.