6 research outputs found

    Complications of ventriculoperitoneal shunts in children in Dar es Salaam

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    Background: From the few reports available, VP shunt surgery in sub- Saharan Africa is associated with significant complications. This study was aimed at establishing the pattern, causes and frequency of complications of VPS in Tanzania.Methods: Sixty five of the 102 children with hydrocephalus treated with ventriculoperitoneal shunts between January 1996 and January 1999 were studied prospectively. The first follow-up was at 2 weeks postoperative when the wounds were evaluated and occipitofrontal circumference measured. Further follow-ups were at 4 weeks and at three months. Collaborating staff of the Comprehensive Community Based Rehabilitation in Tanzania (CCBRT) thereafter regularly followed up the children at home.Results: The male to female ratio was 1.8 to 1. Forty-seven of the children (72%) were less than 12 months old but no patient was under 1 month of age at operation. The mean occipitofrontal circumference was 50.7cm. Shunt blockage was the commonest complication (32.3%) followed by infection (24.6%). The combined complication rate of shunt infection and wound infection was 46.1%. Shunt-related mortality was 13 (20.0%). There was no statistically significant correlation between the occipitofrontal circumference and type of complication or mortality. The mean age among the patients showing disconnection was 21.3 months compared to a mean age of 8.1 months for those not having this complication (P-value=0.04)Conclusion: The complication rates were higher than those in Western series but compared well with findings from sub Saharan Africa other studies

    Choroid plexus coagulation in infants with extreme hydrocephalus or hydranencephaly

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    Ventriculoperitoneal shunt perforations of the gastrointestinal tract

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