Continuum Audio

Clinical Features and Diagnosis of Spontaneous Intracranial Hypotension With Dr. Jill Rau

Jun 4, 2025
Dr. Jill Rau, an assistant professor of clinical neurology and headache medicine expert, discusses the complexities of spontaneous intracranial hypotension. She highlights the disruption of cerebrospinal fluid dynamics that can lead to debilitating issues, including chronic headaches and cognitive impairment. The conversation delves into diagnostic challenges, the importance of recognizing this condition, and innovative treatment approaches like blood patches. Rau sheds light on brain sagging dementia's link to this disorder, underscoring its profound impact on patients' lives.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Low Volume, Not Just Low Pressure

  • Spontaneous intracranial hypotension is primarily a low CSF volume disorder, not necessarily low pressure.
  • About 50% of patients have normal opening pressures despite having symptoms and being treatable.
INSIGHT

Severity of Orthostatic Headaches

  • Orthostatic headache is the hallmark symptom linked with debilitating outcomes.
  • Patients often become severely disabled, living much of their lives lying down due to worsening pain when upright.
ADVICE

Consider Leak in Difficult Headaches

  • Always consider spontaneous CSF leaks in patients with orthostatic headaches or new daily persistent headaches that do not respond to migraine treatments.
  • Investigate patient history for minor trauma and carefully examine brain and full spine imaging to detect leaks.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app