Normal pressure hydrocephalus: Difference between revisions
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** Cognitive symptoms include psychomotor slowing, decreased attention/concentration, impaired executive function, and apathy |
** Cognitive symptoms include psychomotor slowing, decreased attention/concentration, impaired executive function, and apathy |
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* Urinary incontinence is common, presenting first as urgency with an inability to reach the bathroom in time, then later progressing to incontinence with apathy |
* Urinary incontinence is common, presenting first as urgency with an inability to reach the bathroom in time, then later progressing to incontinence with apathy |
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* There should be ''no'' headaches, nausea/vomiting, visual changes, or papilledema |
* There should be ''no'' headaches, nausea/vomiting, visual changes, or [[papilledema]] |
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== Differential Diagnosis == |
== Differential Diagnosis == |
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Revision as of 14:15, 7 March 2026
Clinical Manifestations
- "Wobbly, wet, and wacky"
- Presents with gait instability/apraxia ("magnetic gait") progressing over months to years, followed by dementia
- Cognitive symptoms include psychomotor slowing, decreased attention/concentration, impaired executive function, and apathy
- Urinary incontinence is common, presenting first as urgency with an inability to reach the bathroom in time, then later progressing to incontinence with apathy
- There should be no headaches, nausea/vomiting, visual changes, or papilledema
Differential Diagnosis
- Dementia with Lewy bodies
- Parkinson disease dementia
- Progressive supranuclear palsy
- Multiple system atrophy
- Corticobasal syndrome
- Alzheimer disease
- Vascular dementia
Investigations
- Should have normal CBC, lytes, creatinine, vit B12, TSH, calcium
- CT head showing hydrocephalus
- Lumbar puncture confirming normal pressure
- CSF glucose and protein are typically normal
Management
- High-volume lumbar puncture (30 to 50 mL)
- If there is improvement in symptoms, consider implanting a ventriculoperitoneal shunt