After resolution of the air and completion of the drainage protocol a second time, a VP shunt with a medium differential pressure valve (MDPV) was replaced. That afternoon, a break in the EVD system resulted in introduction of a large amount of intraventricular air and profound neurologic deterioration. Ventricular size had decreased to a BFD of 52 to 45 mm during 48 hours. Two days after achieving a drainage level of −25 cm (treatment day 24), she was conversing about Rembrandt's artwork and the parkinsonian features were nearly gone. On day 16, with a drainage level at 17 cm below the ear tragus (external ventricular drainage of −17 cm), ventricular size had not changed significantly and neurologic examination results had not improved. The initial bifrontal distance (BFD) was 54 mm. Her ventricles were large, despite a patent ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt (with antisiphon device) and a preexisting left subdural shunt. She was hypophonic, with an expressionless face, a resting tremor, and severe gait ataxia. Before institution of the subatmospheric drainage protocol, this 66-year-old woman showed marked psychomotor delay and had single-word verbal responses only. Sequential computed tomographic scans depicting the change in ventricular size occurring as a consequence of subatmospheric ventricular drainage (patient 4, Tables 1 and 2). This patient's condition likely would have improved with an initial shunt revision to a system without an antisiphon device. After replacement of the shunt with a medium differential pressure valve (MDPV), her condition continued to improve with further reduction in ventricular size. Ventricular size had decreased significantly (BFD, 45 mm). After 4 days of drainage at −5 cm (treatment day 8), she was awake and conversant, with near resolution of the gaze palsy. After 24 hours (treatment day 2) of drainage at a level even with the external tragus of the ear (external ventricular drainage of 0 cm), neither ventricular size nor neurologic examination results had changed. Initial bifrontal distance (BFD) was 50 mm. Before institution of the subatmospheric drainage protocol, this 60-year-old woman was lethargic, had a marked upward gaze palsy, and had a severe gait apraxia, despite a patent ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt (with antisiphon device). Sequential computed tomographic scans depicting the change in ventricular size occurring as a consequence of subatmospheric ventricular drainage (patient 3, Tables 1 and 2).
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