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Spontaneous Recovery of Post-Traumatic Cerebrospinal Fluid Rhinorrhea Following Meningitis : A Case Report
Author(s) -
Veli Çıtışlı,
Murat Kocaoğlu,
Ceyda Necan,
Muhammet İbrahimoğlu,
Özkan Çeli̇ker,
Eyüp Baykara,
Mevci̇ Özdemi̇r,
Feri̇dun Acar,
Mehmet Erdal Coşkun
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
international journal of health sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1658-7774
pISSN - 1658-3639
DOI - 10.12816/0024115
Subject(s) - medicine , rhinorrhea , surgery , meningitis , frontal sinus , pneumocephalus , lumbar , cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea , craniotomy , sinus (botany) , complication , botany , biology , genus
The aim of the present report was to present the patient with an anterior cranial base fracture who developed post-traumatic cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea, which recovered after onset of meningitis complication. A 26-year-old male patient who had a traffic accident one week ago was sent to our clinic because of his rhinorrhea persisting for 4 days. On cranial computed tomography, fracture of the left frontal skull base and sinus walls, a fracture line on temporal bone, parenchymal bleeding in the vicinity of the frontal sinus, subarachnoidal bleeding and left temporal extradural hematoma were detected. Then he underwent sinus wall repair and extradural hematoma was drained through bifrontal craniotomy. However, rhinorrhea persisted which resulted a deterioration in consciousness and he entered into a deep somnolent state. When his symptoms of meningitis became apparent, rhinorrhea of the patient disappeared. The patient transferred in intensive care unit and re-connected to a lumbar drainage system. On cerebral magnetic resonance imaging, regression of contrast-enhanced lesions localized in the left anterotemporal and frontal and in the regions lateral to the right trigon and medial to the right thalamus and in the right posteroparietal regions was observed. Despite repair of the anterior cranial fracture and lumbar drainage, rhinorrhea may persist. Herein, development of meningitis caused disappearing of rhinorrhea symptoms without any need for surgical intervention.

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