Type of Surgery
Information
Last updated: 02/17/2009
BOOKS
Aldrich, E. Francois, Lawrence S. Chin, Arthur J. DiPatri, and Howard M. Eisenberg. "Hydrocephalus." In Sabiston Textbook of Surgery, edited by Courtney M. Townsend Jr. 16th ed. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders...
Company, 2001.
Golden, Jeffery A., and Carsten G. Bonnemann. "Hydrocephalus." In Textbook of Clinical Neurology, edited by Christopher G. Goetz and Eric J. Pappert. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders Company, 1999.
PERIODICALS
Hamid, Rukaiya K. A., and Philippa Newfield. "Pediatric Neuroanesthesia: Hydrocephalus."Anesthesiology Clinics of North America 19, no. 2 (June 1, 2001): 207–18.
ORGANIZATIONS
American Academy of Neurology. 1080 Montreal Ave., St. Paul, MN 55116. (800) 879-1960.
OTHER
Dalvi, Arif. "Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus."eMedicine, January 14, 2002 [cited May 21, 2003].
Hord, Eugenia-Daniela. "Hydrocephalus."eMedicine, January 14, 2002 [cited May 21, 2003].
Sgouros, Spyros. "Management of Spina Bifida, Hydrocephalus, and Shunts."eMedicine, May 14, 2003. [cited May 21, 2003].
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Other Information
Definition
Ventricular shunt is a surgical procedure in which a tube is placed in one of the fluid-filled chambers inside the brain (ventricles). The fluid around the brain and the spinal column is called the cerebrospinal fluid. When infection or disease causes an excess of this cerebrospinal fluid in the ventricles, the shunt is placed to drain it and thereby relieve excess pressure.
Purpose
Ventricular shunt relieves hydrocephalus, a condition in which the ventricles are enlarged. In hydrocephalus, pressure from the cerebrospinal fluid usually increases. It may be caused by tumor of the brain or of the membranes covering the brain (meninges), infection of or bleeding into the cerebrospinal fluid, or inborn malformations of the brain. Symptoms of hydrocephalus may include headache, personality disturbances and loss of intellectual abilities (dementia), problems in walking, irritability, vomiting, abnormal eye movements, or a low level of consciousness.
Normal pressure hydrocephalus is associated with progressive dementia, problems in walking, and loss of bladder control (urinary incontinence). Even though the cerebrospinal fluid is not thought to be under increased pressure in this condition, it may also be treated by ventricular shunting.
Other Information
Surgery for removal is generally advised for patients with limited cancer elsewhere in the body and a single brain metastasis.
-Cedar-Sinals
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