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Communicating Hydrocephalus: Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus

A 75 year-old woman presented with gait difficulty, urinary incontinence and difficulty with concentration. Following this scan, the patient had a lumbar puncture that revealed an opening pressure of 160 mm water (NL < 200).

Show the Enlarged Ventricles          Note the Enlarged 4th Ventricle          Show the Transependymal Edema

Communicating Hydrocephalus: Axial CT scans. Note the enlargement of the all ventricles, including the fourth ventricle. Also, note the dark signal in the surrounding white matter which is transependymal edema, the result of hydrocephalus.

Hydrocephalus is recognized as enlarged ventricles out of proportion to the amount of cerebral atrophy. Communicating hydrocephalus occurs when the ventricular system is in continuity with the subarachnoid space and all the ventricles are enlarged, including the fourth ventricle. In nearly all cases, it results from impaired CSF absorption. Rarely, hydrocephalus occurs from excess CSF production. One presentation of communicating hydrocephalus is that of normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH), wherein the opening pressure is within normal range, but too high for the size of the ventricles. Remember LaPlace's Law which states that wall tension (force) is proportional to both pressure and radius; thus, if the ventricles are enlarged (increased radius) even in the setting of normal pressure, then the wall tension is increased resulting in compression of adjacent brain structures.

NPH presents with the classic triad of impaired gait, urinary incontinence, and mental status changes. It is an important disorder to recognize as it is potentially treatable by shunting.


Revised 11/29/06
Copyrighted 2006. David C Preston