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Co-presentation of a subdural empyema and an infected ventriculoperitoneal shunt in an adult patient: A rare complication with review of literature. Surg Neurol Int 2015;6(Suppl 18):S455-8

Date

11/06/2015

Pubmed ID

26539321

Pubmed Central ID

PMC4604643

DOI

10.4103/2152-7806.166785

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-84959490342 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   1 Citation

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The occurrence of a subdural empyema as a complication of a ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt infection is rare. Only three articles have been published on this topic. Moreover, the available literature only involves pediatric patients.

CASE DESCRIPTION: The authors present a 38-year-old male with a preexisting right frontal subdural hygroma that developed into a subdural empyema in the presence of an infected right occipital VP shunt. A brief literature review is provided, and the pathogenesis is discussed.

CONCLUSION: This is the first known report regarding an adult patient with a subdural empyema and a VP shunt infection. Although a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain is not typically ordered during diagnosis of a shunt infection, the authors advocate a low threshold to employ MRI brain to evaluate for other sources of infection, especially in an immunocompromised patient or in a patient with a history of a subdural hematoma or hygroma that can be easily overlook as being stable on computed tomography of head.

Author List

Nguyen HS, Doan N, Shabani S, Gelsomino M, Mueller W

Author

Saman Shabani MD Assistant Professor in the Neurosurgery department at Medical College of Wisconsin