Diagnostic yield of cerebral angiography in patients with computed tomography-negative, lumbar puncture-positive subarachnoid hemorrhage.

Publication/Presentation Date

8-1-2013

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cerebral angiography is generally recommended in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) by positive lumbar puncture (LP) but negative findings on computed tomography (CT). Existing data on the yield of angiography in these patients are very limited.

OBJECTIVE: To retrospectively assess the diagnostic yield of cerebral angiography in patients with CT-/LP+ SAH and to determine the clinical and laboratory predictors of a vascular abnormality on angiography.

METHODS: A total of 35 patients with CT-/LP+ SAH underwent cerebral angiography at our institution between 2008 and 2011. Patient clinical characteristics and LP findings were entered into a multivariate logistic regression analysis to identify predictors of vascular abnormalities.

RESULTS: Twenty-five patients (71.4%) were female and 10 (28.6%) were male, with a mean age of 53 years. Twenty-six patients (74.3%) had cerebrospinal fluid xanthochromia. Sixteen patients (45.7%) were found to have an aneurysm on cerebral angiography. The median CSF red blood cell count of both the first (7790/mm(3) vs 4700/mm(3)), and last collection tubes (6800/mm(3) vs 3219/mm(3)) were higher in patients with cerebral aneurysms vs those without aneurysms (P = .3). On multivariate analysis, there were no clinical or laboratory parameters that predicted the presence of aneurysm on cerebral angiography.

CONCLUSION: The diagnostic yield of cerebral angiography is high (45.7%) in patients with CT-/LP+ SAH. Higher red blood cell counts were noted in patients with cerebral aneurysms but no clinical or laboratory parameter can reliably predict the presence of a vascular anomaly. Thus, it is reasonable to perform cerebral angiography in all patients with CT-/LP+ SAH.

Volume

73

Issue

2

First Page

282

Last Page

287

ISSN

1524-4040

Disciplines

Business Administration, Management, and Operations | Health and Medical Administration | Management Sciences and Quantitative Methods

PubMedID

23615086

Department(s)

Administration and Leadership

Document Type

Article

Share

COinS