Guest guest Posted November 30, 2007 Report Share Posted November 30, 2007 Dear Friends, I think some doctors now feel that high intracranial pressure can often go along with Chiari. High intracranial pressure is also known as Pseudotumor Cerebri. For years, on my MRI's, my ventricles were small to normal and I had more spinal fluid just sitting on top of my brain. It was sort of like a sponge with too much water in it. I also had a Chiari Malformation of 5mm. When I finally was told I had the Chiari, most every doctor I saw said it was a minimal herniation and nothing on which they would operate. I had many symptoms like constant headache, nystagmus and the noises and eventually a constant throbbing in my ear due to all the trapped spinal fluid that had no way out. Finally, I had a decompression but they did not remove enough bone and because of the Pseudotumor, I really needed a shunt. So, after that decompression, I wound up even more miserable with headaches and I still had the noises. The throbbing was a little better from the surgery but I knew I needed more intervention. As soon as I awoke from the first decompression, I knew instantly. Eventually, all of the pressure in my skull caused a large pocket of spinal fluid to accumulate under the patch at the decompression site. So, Dr. Bolognese and Dr. Milhorat fixed a large pseudomenengeocele. (I still cannot spell that word.) They also gave me a larger decompression which helped tremendously. Before they did all of that, they placed a VP shunt for me to help drain some of the fluid before they revised my first decompression. I can recall that the moment I awoke from their decompression, before I could even open my eyes that they had helped me so much. I knew in those few seconds of awakening that the noises had diminished. High pressure problems are on of the reasons why patients still suffer even after a decompression. So, some of us need shunts to go along with decompressions. Even now, if my shunt is not right, I have the worst headaches and sometimes when the pressure is very high, my arms will become numb. When my shunt is doing well, there is such a great difference in everything. I do not know much about placing a shunt before decompressing someone with a Chiari Malformation. When Dr. Bolognese placed my first shunt, I had already been decompressed by some else and I only had the shunt for just a few days until they revised my first decompression. I honestly do not know about having a shunt for any real length of time before having a decompression. I was never in that situation. I know many patients are told that their pain is migraine after they are decompressed and I was told that as well. But, in my case, the pain was really caused from being underdecompressed and from having Pseudotumor Cerebri. PTC is a diagnosis all by itself and it causes headache, visual problems and many of the ear noises and intracranial that just tormented me for so long. Dana Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.