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Surgical Repair of Skull Base CSF Leaks after Cisternography Diagnosis: Analysis of Validity and Surgical Outcome and Impact on Future Treatment Strategies.

Skull base cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leaks can lead to severe complications and require appropriate diagnosis and treatment. Cisternography is applied when exact localization via conventional imaging is not successful. The present study is aimed at identifying factors with potential impact on radiological results and surgical success. Cisternography followed by surgical repair due to skull base CSF leaks was performed in 63 cases between 2002 and 2020. The clinical and radiological findings were analyzed retrospectively. The etiology of CSF leaks was traumatic in 30.2%, spontaneous in 36.5%, and iatrogenic in 33.3%. The sensitivity of cisternography was 87.9%. Spontaneous CSF leaks tended to be diagnosed less frequently via cisternography and were significantly less frequently localized intraoperatively. The median postoperative follow-up period was 34 months. The primary surgical success rate was 79.4%, with a significantly higher success rate for lateral than for anterior skull base defects. Surgical failure tended to be lower in iatrogenic and higher in traumatic defects. Cisternography proved to be a highly sensitive method to localize skull base CSF leaks and can be recommended for advanced diagnostics. Iatrogenic leaks seemed to be more likely to have a favorable surgical outcome, whereas traumatic leaks tended to have a lower surgical success rate.

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