• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Normal pressure hydrocephalus: Diagnostic delay
  • Contributor: Saldarriaga-Cantillo, Alejandra; Yepes-Gaviria, Viviana; Rivas, Juan Carlos
  • imprint: Instituto Nacional de Salud (Colombia), 2020
  • Published in: Biomédica
  • Language: Not determined
  • DOI: 10.7705/biomedica.5382
  • ISSN: 2590-7379; 0120-4157
  • Keywords: General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <jats:p>Introduction: Normotensive hydrocephalus is a differential diagnosis in the evaluation of the dementia syndrome. The diagnostic protocols would allow detecting this pathology that has more effective treatment than other dementias.Objective: To describe a population with clinical suspicion of normal pressure hydrocephalus evaluated in a Colombian psychiatric hospital and discuss the possible reasons for its diagnostic and therapeutic delay.Materials and methods: We conducted a retrospective study of medical records to identify patients with suspected normal pressure hydrocephalus during a 5-year period.Results: Thirty-five patients with suspected normal pressure hydrocephalus underwent diagnostic lumbar puncture and five of them were considered candidates for a peritonealvenous shunt, but none underwent this surgical procedure. After three to six months of the lumbar puncture, the gait pattern improved in 22.8% of the patients, cognition in 22.8%, and sphincter control in 11.4%. Improvement was not sustained in the long term (1 year) in any of them.Conclusion: This study suggests the poor implementation of the protocols for evaluating patients with cognitive deficits and delays in the diagnosis of normal pressure hydrocephalus. A small number of patients were identified as candidates for treatment.Normal pressure hydrocephalus is a potentially reversible clinical entity with the placement of a peritoneal ventricular shunt, but delays in diagnosis and treatment have deleterious consequences for patients and their families.</jats:p>
  • Access State: Open Access