Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-5g6vh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T04:38:45.068Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Is postpartum headache after epidural anaesthesia always innocent?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 2008

O. S. Can*
Affiliation:
Department of Anaesthesiology and ReanimationAnkara University School of Medicine, Samanpazari, Ankara, Turkey
A. A. Yilmaz
Affiliation:
Department of Anaesthesiology and ReanimationAnkara University School of Medicine, Samanpazari, Ankara, Turkey
E. Gurcan
Affiliation:
Department of Anaesthesiology and ReanimationAnkara University School of Medicine, Samanpazari, Ankara, Turkey
N. Alkis
Affiliation:
Department of Anaesthesiology and ReanimationAnkara University School of Medicine, Samanpazari, Ankara, Turkey
A. Uysalel
Affiliation:
Department of Anaesthesiology and ReanimationAnkara University School of Medicine, Samanpazari, Ankara, Turkey
*
Correspondence to: Ozlem Selvi Can, Department of Anesthesiology, Ankara University School of Medicine, Ibn-i Sina Hospital, 06100, Samanpazari, Ankara, Turkey. E-mail: ozlemscan@gmail.com; Tel: +90 505 456 8780; Fax: +90 312 311 5057

Abstract

Type
Correspondence
Copyright
Copyright © European Society of Anaesthesiology 2008

EDITOR:

Parturients with headache, who have received regional anaesthesia for labour, are usually treated for post-dural puncture headache (PDPH) [Reference Borum, Naul and McLeskey1Reference Lockhart and Baysinger3]. Dural sinus thrombosis (DST) is a rare but potentially fatal condition, which may be encountered during pregnancy or puerperium and may be associated with obesity, hypercoagulable states, usage of some drugs, central nervous system infections, neighbouring infections or cancers. The similarity of symptoms between DST and PDPH makes diagnosis difficult. DST has a wide spectrum of non-specific symptoms with headache often being the dominant symptom. We present a case of a parturient with headache after a history of a dural tap. The rationale for reporting this case is that DST is unusual but potentially fatal and there is little experience with the challenging situation whereby DST can be present either in isolation or concomitant with PDPH. It may therefore be mistreated as PDPH. This case should serve to highlight both the potential problems with diagnosis and the options for treatment and may pave the way for more detailed studies.

Case report

A 35-yr-old gravida 3 para 2 woman was admitted to hospital in active labour at 38 weeks gestation. She had previously undergone two caesarean sections under general anaesthesia and had no history of neurologic, haemotologic or other disorders and was taking no medication. There was no problem with her physical examination and laboratory findings. A 17-G Tuohy needle was introduced at the L4–5 level to perform epidural analgesia. Accidental dural puncture occurred and the needle was re-introduced at the L3–4 level without any problem. Epidural analgesia was performed and the intraoperative course was uneventful. The catheter was removed 24 h after the operation. The patient was discharged at 48 h. On the fourth postoperative day, the patient was re-admitted to the hospital with nausea, vomiting and a bi-frontal headache that was extending to the back of the neck and was aggravated by sitting. When questioned she reported a moderate-degree headache at the time of discharge but she had not mentioned this at the time. Because of the history of a dural tap and the pattern of the headache, a diagnosis of PDPH was made. Bed rest, increased oral fluid intake and analgesia were recommended. On the sixth postoperative day, she was admitted once again with a severe headache, and an epidural blood patch (EBP) was performed. Immediately after performing the blood patch the patient’s headache diminished. The following day, the patient was brought to the hospital with loss of consciousness and was assessed by a neurosurgeon. She was lethargic and dysarthric. There was no papilloedema or other neurological deficit. Cranial computed tomography (CT) did not show any abnormality and therefore a magnetic resonance (MR) scan and MR venography were performed. The MR scan showed a possible superior sagittal sinus thrombosis. MR venography confirmed that the thrombosis was situated within the superior sagittal, the left transverse and the sigmoid sinuses (Fig. 1). The patient was admitted and prescribed an antiepileptic drug plus heparin. Heparin was administered for 6 days and thereafter coumadin treatment was initiated. Except for a small decrease in protein C level (59%; normal range 70–140%) and an increase in D-dimer level (574 μg L−1; normal range 50–250 μg L−1), laboratory findings were normal. The patient’s headache resolved completely on the 6th day of receiving anticoagulation (post partum day 13), and the patient was discharged. Over a 2-month follow-up period, no neurologic sequelae were found, and a subsequent MR venography revealed recanalization of the thrombosed vessels.

Figure 1 Sagittal T1-weighted MR venography demonstrating the lack of normal blood flow in the superior sagittal (single arrows), the left transverse (double arrow) and the sigmoid (triple arrow) sinuses.

Discussion

PDPH is characterized by frontal or occipital headache aggravated by sitting and is often associated with nausea and vomiting. It usually starts within 48 h of dural puncture and is attributed to the leakage of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) through the dural rent. In most cases it can be successfully treated conservatively and generally limits itself to a few days although in some cases an EBP is needed [Reference Vercauteren, Hoffmann, Mertens, Sermeus and Adriaensen4].

DST has a variety of clinical symptoms and signs that range from solely a headache to severe coma [Reference Borum, Naul and McLeskey1Reference Lockhart and Baysinger3,Reference Acheson and Malik5,Reference Aidi, Chaunu, Biousse and Bousser6]. The clinical presentation is closely associated with the location and extent of the thrombosis. During labour, maternal pushing and fluctuations of intracranial pressure may damage the vessel endothelium, thereby increasing the likelihood of a thrombotic event. Puerperal changes leading to a hypercoagulable state also increases the risk of DST. Furthermore, a traumatic injury to the dura mater while performing regional anaesthesia may cause a CSF leak leading to intracranial hypotension. This can eventually result in venous dilatation and stasis, which increases the risk of DST [Reference Monsalve, Ortega and Rueda-Acevedo2,Reference Lockhart and Baysinger3]. Hereditary factors, such as protein C or S deficiency, may predispose to thrombosis development and may be responsible for its formation. The results of the International Study on Cerebral Vein and Dural Sinus Thrombosis (ISCVT), a multi-centre prospective cohort of 624 patients, indicated that 44% of patients with cerebral vein thrombosis have more than one risk factor for intracranial thrombosis. Therefore, the identification of one risk factor should not prohibit the search for additional risk factors [Reference Ferro, Canhão, Stam, Bousser and Barinagarrementeria7].

The patient presented here had the symptoms of positional headache, nausea and vomiting. Despite the history of a dural tap and the pattern of headache, the late onset of her symptoms made a diagnosis of PDPH less likely. When she was questioned in detail, however, it was discovered that she had been experiencing a moderate-degree headache at discharge; the intensity of her complaint has gradually increased over time. The clinical diagnosis of PDPH therefore seemed reasonable. Conservative treatment failed and a blood patch was performed resulting in partial pain relief.

Lockhart and Baysinger [Reference Lockhart and Baysinger3] summarized the results of 21 cases with DST based on a literature review. Most of the cases (16/21) were post partum patients and the remainder had undergone diagnostic procedures such as lumbar puncture or lumbar myelography. In most of the cases, headache had a variable severity at onset but the pattern of the pain changed to a non-positional, permanent manner over the course of time. It is possible that the headache that occurred in our case was initially PDPH but continuing CSF leakage and intracranial hypotension led to venous dilatation and stasis and this, combined with the patient’s protein C deficiency and hypercoagulable state, resulted in DST. This could explain both why the headache gained intensity and a permanent pattern over time and why the pain relief after EBP was partial and thereafter gradually attenuated. Twenty-four hours after receiving the EBP, the patient lost consciousness at home, probably occurring in association with a seizure. Cranial CT is usually the first imaging technique used in such presentations, but it is helpful in only 25–30% of the cases [Reference Lockhart and Baysinger3,Reference Bousser and Ferro8]. In our case, the CT imaging was normal, and MR venography was the only investigation able to identify the thromboses. These findings were compatible with the clinical presentation. In the case of the occlusion of the sagittal sinus, occurrence of motor deficits and seizures are typical, while patients with left transverse sinus thrombosis usually have speech problems. D-dimer levels are usually increased and accordingly, a low value may help the physician to exclude diagnosis, although a negative value does not completely rule out thrombosis [Reference Bousser and Ferro8].

Any treatment modality selected must include the use of parenteral anticoagulants such as intravenous heparin or subcutaneous low-molecular-weight heparin. Heparin treatment should not be withdrawn until remission of the acute phase of the disease has occurred, i.e. normal consciousness, or until the severity of headache has begun to fall. Oral anticoagulation therapy may be ceased after 3 months in low-risk patients. If there are additional risk factors, it is reasonable to continue the treatment for 6 or 12 months.

PDPH and DST may both occur in the early post partum period, and the similarity of the symptoms can cause a delay in diagnosis, misdiagnosis or even mistreatment. The differential diagnosis of a post partum headache must include DST if features of the headache change and if EBP does not provide complete pain relief, particularly in the presence of additional risk factors and findings supporting the presence of intracranial pathology. It must be kept in mind that the CT scan is positive in only one-third of cases. Anticoagulant therapy must be commenced immediately after DST diagnosis has been confirmed.

References

1.Borum, SE, Naul, LG, McLeskey, CH. Postpartum dural venous sinus thrombosis after postdural puncture headache and epidural blood patch. Anesthesiology 1997; 86: 487490.Google Scholar
2.Monsalve, GA, Ortega, R, Rueda-Acevedo, M. Multiple dural sinus thrombosis: a differential diagnosis of a postpuncture headache in a puerperal patient. Neurol India 2006; 54: 447448.Google Scholar
3.Lockhart, EM, Baysinger, CL. Intracranial venous thrombosis in the parturient. Anesthesiology 2007; 107: 652658.Google Scholar
4.Vercauteren, MP, Hoffmann, VH, Mertens, E, Sermeus, L, Adriaensen, HA. Seven-year review of requests for epidural blood patches for headache after dural puncture: referral patterns and the effectiveness of blood patches. Eur J Anaesthesiol 1999; 16: 298303.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
5.Acheson, J, Malik, A. Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis presenting in the puerperium. Emerg Med J 2006; 23: e44.Google Scholar
6.Aidi, S, Chaunu, MP, Biousse, V, Bousser, MG. Changing pattern of headache pointing to cerebral venous thrombosis after lumbar puncture and intravenous high-dose corticosteroids. Headache 1999; 39: 559564.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
7.Ferro, JM, Canhão, P, Stam, J, Bousser, MG, Barinagarrementeria, F. ISCVT Group. Prognosis of cerebral vein and dural sinus thrombosis: results of the International Study on Cerebral Vein and Dural Sinus Thrombosis (ISCVT). Stroke 2004; 35: 664670.Google Scholar
8.Bousser, MG, Ferro, JM. Cerebral venous thrombosis: an update. Lancet Neurol 2007; 6: 162170.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1 Sagittal T1-weighted MR venography demonstrating the lack of normal blood flow in the superior sagittal (single arrows), the left transverse (double arrow) and the sigmoid (triple arrow) sinuses.