Chiari malformation
Classification according to ICD-10 | |
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Q07.0 | Arnold Chiari Syndrome |
ICD-10 online (WHO version 2019) |
As Chiari malformation is a group of developmental disorders with displacement of the cerebellum proportions through the foramen magnum ( foramen magnum ) into the spinal canal designated at the same time existing reduced-posterior fossa. It is named after the pathologist Hans Chiari (1851-1916), who first described this disorder. The names Arnold-Chiari malformation and Arnold-Chiari syndrome were propagated by the students of the pathologist Julius Arnold (1835-1915), but do not seem justified because this group of developmental disorders was only superficially described by him.
Classification
Four different types are divided based on their characteristics and localization:
- Type I: There is a displacement of the cerebellar tonsils . As a complication, it can lead to syringomyelia come. Bony malformations of the skull base and vertebral bodies are less common. Patients can be symptom-free. It is not uncommon for complaints to appear in young adulthood. In addition to head and neck pain, this can include: B. Signs of damage to the cerebellum (e.g. an unsteady gait known as ataxia ) or the brain stem (e.g. swallowing disorders).
- Type II: Here there is a more pronounced displacement of the cerebellar worm combined with compression and displacement of the brain stem as well as displacement of the fourth ventricle with the development of hydrocephalus . Normally there are bony malformations with the formation of a myelomeningiocele . The term Arnold-Chiari malformation only refers to this sub-form of the Chiari malformation.
- Type III: With this rarer sub-form there is a massive displacement of the cerebellum, with the formation of a bony defect also with the formation of a so-called encephalocele .
- Type IV: In this rarest sub-form, an underdevelopment ( hypoplasia ) of the cerebellum occurs.
The diagnosis is made by magnetic resonance imaging . In fetuses , the so-called lemon sign or banana sign can be used as a sonographic soft marker in prenatal diagnostic sonography, a possible indication of a Chiari malformation.
therapy
In the event of a hydrocephalic build-up with a herniated cerebellar tonsil, decompression is carried out via a suboccipital access.
Web links
- NINDS Chiari Malformation Information Page Resource of the National Institutes of Health with links to ongoing clinical studies
Individual evidence
- ↑ H. Chiari: About changes in the cerebellum as a result of hydrocephaly of the cerebrum. In: Dtsch. Med. Wochenschr. 1891; 17, pp. 1172–1175 (first description) Textarchiv - Internet Archive
- ^ PJ Koehler, SH Greenblatt: The Chiari Malformation. In: Koehler, Bruyn & Pearce (Eds.): Neurological Eponyms. Oxford University Press, 2000 (medical history work)
- ↑ E. Schijman: History, anatomic forms, and pathogenesis of Chiari I malformations. In: Childs Nerv Syst. , 2004, 20, pp. 323-328. PMID 14762679 .
- ^ Chiari Malformation Fact Sheet: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS). Retrieved February 3, 2014 .