YouTube Video “Mayo Clinic Q&A podcast: Cerebrospinal fluid leaks are commonly misdiagnosed” With A Link To An Additional YouTube Resource On The Subject

One reason today’s topic is so important is that cerebrospinal spinal fluid leaks can be mistaken for Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome. Please see and carefully review the YouTube video, CSF Leaks – What the POTS Community Should Know, presented by Dr. Ian Carroll, Jul 20, 2020, 52:01, Dysautonomia International:

Dr. Ian Carroll, Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology, Perioperative & Pain Medicine at Stanford University, presented this informative lecture on the similarities between POTS and cerebral spinal fluid leaks, and the need to carefully consider the possibility of a leak in patients with orthostatic headaches, during Dysautonomia International’s 2018 Conference in Nashville, TN.

In this post, I link to and embed the YouTube video, Mayo Clinic Q&A podcast: Cerebrospinal fluid leaks are commonly misdiagnosed, Jun 1, 2021, 15:11.

Cerebrospinal fluid is the clear fluid that surrounds the brain and spinal cord. It cushions the brain and spinal cord from injury, delivers nutrients and acts as a waste removal system for the brain.
A cerebrospinal fluid leak occurs when fluid escapes through a small tear or hole in the outermost layer of tissue that surrounds the brain or the spinal cord. Leaks can occur in the skull or at any point along the spinal column.
Because headache is a common symptom, patients are often misdiagnosed or mistreated for migraines.
“About 85% of patients with a cerebrospinal fluid leak at the level of the spine will have an orthostatic headache — one that gets worse when they stand up and better when they lie down,” says Dr. Jeremy Cutsforth-Gregory, a Mayo Clinic neurologist.
Once properly diagnosed, a blood patch procedure is often an effective treatment for spinal cerebral spinal fluid leaks. The patient’s own blood is injected into the spinal canal, and the blood clot that forms can stop the leak. In other patients, surgery or a novel procedure called paraspinal vein embolization may be more appropriate.
On the Mayo Clinic Q&A podcast, Dr. Cutsforth-Gregory discusses diagnosing and treating spinal cerebrospinal fluid leaks.

 

 

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