Innovative approach to the difficult ventricular shunt using pleural access device for maintenance drainage: Case report

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Abstract

Patients with complex medical problems and multiple failed ventricular shunts require continued innovation for hydrocephalus management. The authors report the case of a 4-year-old boy with refractory hydrocephalus and secondary reduced ability to absorb CSF in both the pleural and peritoneal cavities following renal transplantation. A novel management approach was devised with split shunting to pleural and peritoneal targets as well as prophylactic pleural port placement to provide a method for minimally invasive thoracentesis should symptomatic pleural effusions develop. Fluid was successfully aspirated via the pleural port with relief of symptoms over a period of 16 months without complication. The authors demonstrate that a previously undescribed approach to distal shunting can prevent neurological sequelae of shunt failure and permit noninvasive maintenance drainage for patients in whom symptomatic pleural effusion is a recurrent complication.

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Weeks, S. R., Gosztyla, C. E., Davidson, L., & Pryor, H. I. (2020). Innovative approach to the difficult ventricular shunt using pleural access device for maintenance drainage: Case report. Journal of Neurosurgery: Pediatrics, 25(4), 407–410. https://doi.org/10.3171/2019.10.PEDS19122

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