Joanna W. Davidson
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Thrombosis of a branch of the major intracerebral venous drainage system
- Most commonly infectious
- Spreads from facial, odontogenic, or sinus infection
- Less frequently occurs with hypercoagulable state
Anatomy
3 primary sites of thrombosis:
- Cavernous sinus—Most common:
- Drainage from superficial venous system
- Superolateral to the sphenoid sinus and surrounds the sella:
- Cranial nerves (CN) III, IV, V1, and V2 traverse the lateral wall of the sinus.
- CN VI and the internal carotid artery occupy the medial portion of the sinus.
- Can also involve transverse sinus and superficial sagittal sinus
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Hematogenous spread of facial, otic, or neck infection into venous drainage system
- Contiguous spread directly from infected sinus cavities (sphenoid, ethmoid > frontal)
- Bacterial overgrowth leads to inflammation and coagulation, resulting in thrombosis.
- Venous engorgement of cavernous sinus can affect adjacent structures:
- Ophthalmoplegia from inflammation of CN III, IV, or VI
- Pupillary fixation from CN III
- Sensory deficits or paresthesia of forehead or cheek from CN V1 and V2
ETIOLOGY
- Septic:
- Staphylococcus aureus
accounts for 70%
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
, gram-negative bacilli, and anaerobes also seen
- Fungi less common; include Aspergillus and Rhizopus species
- Aseptic:
- Less common
- Granulomatous conditions (TB)
- Inflammatory disorders
- From mass effect (tumors at base of skull, aneurysms)
- Hypercoagulable states
Pediatric Considerations
- Children may present with nonspecific symptoms such as decreased energy, vomiting, fever.
- Have high level of suspicion for any child with recent otitis or pharyngitis with worsening symptoms, declining mental status, or signs of increased intracranial pressure (ICP):
- HTN, bradycardia, lethargy, vomiting, gait instability
- More common in the neonatal period, when diagnosis can be extremely difficult to make
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Symptoms:
- Headache occurs in 90% of patients.
- Fever
- Ocular or retrobulbar pain
- Facial swelling
- Visual disturbance
- Facial dysesthesia
- Lethargy or altered mental status
- Signs:
- Periorbital edema is earliest sign
- Chemosis with retinal vein engorgement
- Ptosis, proptosis
- Ophthalmoplegia
- CN palsies:
- Lateral gaze palsy (CN VI)
- Hypo/hyperesthesia of V1 and V2 (CN V)
- Meningismus
- Altered level of consciousness or coma
- Seizures
- Sepsis with cardiovascular instability or collapse
History
High-risk historical factors include:
- A history of trauma
- Previous ear/nose/throat (ENT) or neurosurgical instrumentation
- History of central face furuncle that was manipulated
- Diabetes or immunocompromised state (HIV, steroid use, cancer) may increase risk
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Clinical diagnosis: Venous engorgement, ocular symptoms, unilateral symptoms that become bilateral, rapidly progressive
- Labs nonspecific
- Imaging findings can be subtle
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Neither sensitive nor specific
- CBC:
- PT/PTT/INR
- ESR and D-dimer usually elevated
- Lumbar puncture/CSF: Parameningeal inflammation or frank mengingitis
Imaging
- CT scan:
- Can be normal early in disease course
- Noncontrast can show increased density
- Contrast can show filling defect
- May identify original source of infection (e.g., sinusitis)
- Dilated superior ophthalmic vein
- Associated intracranial hemorrhage
- Signs of increased ICP: Small ventricles, loss of sulci
- MRI with MR angiography (MRA)/MR venography (MRV):
- Diagnostic modality of choice
- Direct visualization of intracranial vessels and sinuses
- Capable of visualizing thrombus at any stage
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Meningitis/encephalitis
- Intracranial abscess
- Periorbital and orbital cellulitis
- Internal carotid artery aneurysm or fistula
- Pseudotumor cerebri
- Acute angle-closure glaucoma
- Intracranial hemorrhage
- Tolosa–Hunt syndrome: Rare granulomatous inflammation of cavernous sinus
ALERT
- Extremely difficult diagnosis to make.
- Maintain a high level of suspicion in toxic-appearing patients with recent ENT infections or in patients with refractory headache and risk factors for hypercoagulability or intracranial infection.
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
ALERT
- Patients can be altered and unstable.
- May require rapid assessment and stabilization of airway, breathing, and circulation (ABCs)
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Careful assessment of mental status with intubation for airway protection as needed
- Aggressive fluid resuscitation for cardiovascular instability
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics with multiple drug regimens:
- Cover for gram positives, gram negatives, as well as anaerobes.
- Nafcillin or vancomycin (for methicillin-resistant
S. aureus
[MRSA]) + ceftriaxone:
- Add metronidazole or clindamycin in significant infections.
- Heparin:
- Attenuates clot propagation and decreases morbidity/mortality.
- Controversial in transverse and sagittal thrombosis owing to higher risk of subsequent hemorrhage
- Administer only after ruling out bleed on CT scan.
- Questionable superiority of LMWH over IV heparin
- Endovascular TPA in severe refractory cases
- Systemic steroids:
- Believed to be of benefit with concomitant pituitary insufficiency, and with infectious or inflammatory etiologies
- Appropriate management of increased ICP as needed
- Surgical consultation for drainage of primary site of infection (e.g., dental abscess or sinusitis)
MEDICATION
- Ceftriaxone: 2 g/d IV (peds: 80–100 mg/kg/d to q12h)
- Clindamycin: 300–900 mg IV q6–12h (neonates: 10–20 mg/kg/24h IV divided q6–12h; peds: 25–40 mg/kg/24h divided q6–8h)
- Metronidazole: 500 mg IV q6h (neonates: 7.5–30 mg/kg/24h IV divided q12–24h; peds: 30 mg/kg/24h IV divided q6h)
- Nafcillin: 1–2 g IV q4h (peds: 50–75 mg/kg/24h IV divided q8–12h depending on age)
- Vancomycin: 1 g IV q12h (peds: 10–20 mg/kg IV q8–12h depending on age)
First Line
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics
- Anticoagulation
Second Line
- Dexamethasone or hydrocortisone IV
- Endovascular thrombolytics in selected cases
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- All patients with sinus thrombosis warrant admission to a monitored setting.
- Consider ICU admission.
Discharge Criteria
None
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Neurologic and neurosurgical consultation
COMPLICATIONS
- Blindness
- 1/6 left with visual impairment
- CN palsies
- Meningitis or intracranial abscess
- Seizures, especially in superior sagittal sinus thrombosis
- Pituitary necrosis and insufficiency from local invasion
- Septic emboli
- Sepsis and shock
- 30% mortality
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Diagnosis is made on clinical evaluation and confirmatory lab evidence. Maintain a high index of suspicion.
- Noncontrast head CT is often negative or nonspecific. MRI/MRV is the diagnostic imaging modality of choice and should be pursued in high-risk individuals.
- Administer IV antibiotics early, especially in any ill-appearing patient with ENT or neurologic complaints.
- Hypercoagulable states result in
both
central and peripheral venous thrombosis. Workup and management decisions must include consideration of systemic thromboembolism.