Intracranial Hypotension Clinical Trial
Official title:
Non-invasive Estimation of CSF Pressure Using MRI in Patients With Spontaneous Intracranial Hypotension
The purpose of this study is to estimate the intracranial pressure (ICP, the pressure in your head) in subjects with intracranial hypotension (a condition caused by leakage of the fluid that surrounds your brain and spine) using non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques, and to determine whether changes in estimated ICP are seen after treatment of this condition.
Subjects with known intracranial hypotension who are scheduled to undergo standard-of-care
CSF pressure measurement using lumbar puncture prior to planned epidural patch treatment will
first undergo a research MRI of the brain in order to estimate ICP. The imaging protocol is
listed in Appendix 1. All research scans are performed without intravenous contrast.
Approximate scan time per session will be 20-22 minutes.
Subjects will then undergo lumbar puncture according to the standard-of-care treatment plan.
Estimated values of CSF pressure derived from MRI will be compared to values measured during
lumbar puncture. Patients will then undergo standard-of-care epidural patching. A repeat
research MRI after epidural patching will be performed to assess for differences in pre- and
post-treatment scans.
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