Brain herniation syndromes

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Background

  • Brain herniation occurs when increased intracranial pressure causes brain tissue to shift across rigid dural structures (falx, tentorium) or through the foramen magnum
  • Represents a life-threatening neurological emergency requiring immediate recognition and intervention
  • Most commonly caused by mass lesions (intracranial hemorrhage, tumor, abscess) or diffuse cerebral edema

Types

Type of brain herniation

Uncal (Lateral Transtentorial)

  • Most common clinically significant herniation pattern
  • Medial temporal lobe (uncus) herniates over the tentorial edge
  • Classic triad: ipsilateral blown pupil (third nerve palsy), contralateral hemiparesis, decreased consciousness
    • Contralateral hemiparesis occurs ~75% of the time (ipsilateral Kernohan notch phenomenon in ~25%)
  • May progress to bilateral fixed dilated pupils and posturing if untreated

Central Transtentorial

  • Both cerebral hemispheres herniate downward through the tentorium
  • Progressive rostral-to-caudal deterioration:
    • Early: small reactive pupils, Cheyne-Stokes respiration, increased tone
    • Late: midpoint fixed pupils, extensor posturing, loss of brainstem reflexes

Cerebellotonsillar (Tonsillar)

Upward (Ascending) Transtentorial

  • Posterior fossa mass pushes cerebellum upward through tentorial notch
  • Pinpoint pupils, downward conjugate gaze
  • Obstructive hydrocephalus may occur

Subfalcine

  • Cingulate gyrus herniates under the falx cerebri
  • May compress anterior cerebral artery → contralateral leg weakness
  • Often clinically silent early but may progress to other herniation patterns

Clinical Features

  • Decreasing GCS
  • Unilateral or bilateral pupil dilation and fixation
  • Abnormal posturing (decorticate → decerebrate)
  • Cushing reflex: hypertension, bradycardia, irregular respirations (late finding)
  • Loss of brainstem reflexes (corneal, gag, oculocephalic)
  • Respiratory pattern changes (Cheyne-Stokes → central neurogenic hyperventilation → ataxic → apnea)

Management

  • ABCs — secure airway early; avoid hypoxia and hypotension
  • Elevate head of bed 30 degrees, keep head midline
  • Hyperosmolar therapy:
    • Mannitol 1-1.5 g/kg IV bolus
    • Hypertonic saline (23.4%) 30 mL IV over 10-20 min via central line (or 3% saline 250-500 mL via peripheral line)
  • Hyperventilation to PaCO2 30-35 mmHg (temporary bridge — effect lasts 15-20 min)
  • Emergent neurosurgery consult for surgical decompression or EVD placement
  • Treat underlying cause (evacuate hematoma, treat cerebral edema)
  • Avoid hyperthermia, hyperglycemia, seizures

Disposition

  • All patients with brain herniation require emergent ICU admission
  • Neurosurgical consultation is mandatory
  • Consider emergent operative intervention for:
    • Epidural hematoma with herniation signs
    • Large subdural hematoma with midline shift
    • Obstructive hydrocephalus
  • Transfer to neurosurgical center if unavailable on site
  • Goals of care discussion appropriate for devastating injuries

See Also

References