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CSF Rhinorrhea

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CSF Rhinorrhea: Definition & Etiology - The Tell-Tale Drip

  • Definition: Leakage of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) into the nasal cavity.
  • Etiology:
    • Traumatic (Most common):
      • Accidental: Head injury (e.g., road traffic accidents).
      • Surgical: Functional Endoscopic Sinus Surgery (FESS), skull base surgery.
    • Non-traumatic/Spontaneous:
      • High pressure leaks: Tumors, hydrocephalus.
      • Normal pressure leaks: Congenital defects (e.g., patent cribriform plate), osteoporotic erosions, idiopathic.
  • Common Sites: Cribriform plate, fovea ethmoidalis, sphenoid sinus (lateral wall, Sternberg's canal/lateral craniopharyngeal canal), frontal sinus posterior wall.

⭐ Most common cause of CSF rhinorrhea is head trauma (accidental).

CSF Rhinorrhea: Clinical Features - Spotting the Leak

  • Key Symptom: Unilateral, clear, watery nasal discharge (often initially mistaken for allergic rhinitis).
  • Discharge Characteristics:
    • Salty or metallic taste.
    • ↑ with straining, bending forward, Valsalva maneuver (Dandy's sign).
  • Associated Symptoms:
    • Headache (can be positional, due to intracranial hypotension or meningitis).
    • Anosmia.
  • Bedside Tests:
    • Halo Sign / Double Ring Sign: CSF separates from blood/mucus on filter paper/tissue (suggestive).

    • Reservoir Sign: Accumulation of CSF overnight, gushes in morning.

⭐ The presence of glucose in nasal fluid is suggestive but not diagnostic of CSF, as nasal secretions can also contain glucose; Beta-2 transferrin is specific.

CSF Rhinorrhea: Diagnostic Workup - Confirming the Culprit

  • Biochemical Analysis (Nasal Fluid):
    • Glucose: Qualitative, >30 mg/dL (often cited, unreliable alone).
    • Beta-2 Transferrin: ⭐ GOLD STANDARD (most specific & sensitive).
    • Beta-Trace Protein (PGD Synthase): Highly specific.
  • Nasal Endoscopy: To identify leak site, especially with active dripping or after maneuvers.
  • Imaging for Localization:
    • High-Resolution CT (HRCT) PNS & Skull Base: Best for bone detail.
    • CT Cisternography: Intrathecal contrast to visualize active leak.
    • MR Cisternography/MRI CISS/FIESTA: No radiation, good for soft tissue, fluid detection.
  • Intrathecal Fluorescein: Used intraoperatively to visualize leak site (low dose, monitor for side effects).

CSF leak sites and frequency

⭐ Beta-2 transferrin is produced in the liver but undergoes desialylation in the CNS, making it a unique marker for CSF, perilymph, and aqueous humor.

CSF Rhinorrhea: Complications & Management Aims - Danger & Direction

  • Primary & Most Feared Complication:
    • Ascending bacterial meningitis (Streptococcus pneumoniae common pathogen).
    • Recurrent meningitis: highly suggestive of underlying CSF leak.
  • Other Complications:
    • Brain abscess, encephalitis.
    • Tension pneumocephalus, seizures.
  • Goals of Management:
      1. Stop the CSF leak.
      1. Prevent meningitis & other intracranial complications.
      1. Preserve/restore neurological function (e.g., olfaction, vision).

⭐ Prophylactic antibiotics are controversial in traumatic CSF rhinorrhea but are generally given if meningitis is suspected or if surgery is delayed.

CSF Rhinorrhea: Treatment Modalities - Plugging the Gap

  • Conservative Management (Traumatic, small leaks):
    • Bed rest (head elevated 30°), avoid straining.
    • Acetazolamide, stool softeners.
    • Lumbar drain (optional, 3-5 days).
    • Trial for 7-10 days.
  • Surgical Management (Failed conservative, spontaneous, large defects, recurrent meningitis):
    • Approach: Endoscopic endonasal (preferred, >90% success).
    • Technique: Multilayered closure (fascia lata, cartilage, fat, fibrin glue).

⭐ The success rate for primary endoscopic repair of CSF rhinorrhea is typically over 90%.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Most common cause: Trauma (accidental > iatrogenic); spontaneous leaks often due to ↑ ICP.
  • Clinical signs: Unilateral, clear, watery discharge (salty taste), ↑ with straining (Furstenberg's sign).
  • Diagnosis: Beta-2 transferrin is pathognomonic; Halo/Ring sign (glucose) is a bedside test.
  • Localization: CT or MR cisternography identifies the leak site.
  • Major complication: Meningitis.
  • Management: Endoscopic surgical repair for persistent/spontaneous leaks; cribriform plate is a frequent site.

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