By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Global News TodayGlobal News TodayGlobal News Today
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Science
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Health
Reading: New Research Reconsiders the Cause of Hydrocephalus – SBU News
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Global News TodayGlobal News Today
Font ResizerAa
  • World
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Home
    • Home 1
    • Home 2
    • Home 3
    • Home 4
    • Home 5
  • Demos
  • Categories
    • Technology
    • Business
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • World
    • Politics
    • Science
    • Health
  • Bookmarks
  • More Foxiz
    • Sitemap
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Advertise
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Health

New Research Reconsiders the Cause of Hydrocephalus – SBU News

Editorial Staff
Last updated: April 14, 2026 6:49 pm
Editorial Staff
3 days ago
Share
SHARE

Hydrocephalus, commonly referred to as “water on the brain,” is a dangerous and potentially deadly condition that can harm the brain. For more than a century, physicians have believed that the buildup of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) within the brain and the organ’s inability to absorb CSF is the main cause of hydrocephalus.
Now, new research led by Stony Brook Medicine neurosurgeon Michael Egnor, MD, suggests this process is not the cause, and if proved true, the finding could revolutionize treatments for hydrocephalus.
 The research is detailed in a paper published in the Journal of Neurosurgery: Pediatrics (JNS Pediatrics), the leading international journal on the research of neurological conditions in children, including hydrocephalus.
Hydrocephalus is prevalent worldwide and can affect people of any age. According to the Hydrocephalus Association, one million Americans suffer from the condition and some 25 million worldwide. The most common medical conditions that can lead to hydrocephalus are children who are born with hydrocephalus or develop it from brain hemorrhage of prematurity, people with head trauma, aneurysms, strokes or tumors, and elderly who can develop normal pressure hydrocephalus.
Some people with hydrocephalus have a severe build-up of pressure in the brain that can be life-threatening. Others who are elderly can have hydrocephalus that causes difficulty with walking, bladder control and memory loss.
For nearly all patients, hydrocephalus is an incurable disease that requires lifelong medical care and operations. Hydrocephalus can only be treated with surgery, which usually consists of the insertion of a CSF shunt from the brain into the abdomen. As medical devices, shunts have high malfunction rates, which complicates hydrocephalus management and can lead to many operations for patients to keep shunts working.
“For a century, neurosurgeons and scientists have believed that hydrocephalus is caused by a blockage to CSF absorption that causes a buildup of cerebrospinal fluid in the ventricles of the brain,” said Egnor, lead author and professor of Neurosurgery and Pediatrics in the Renaissance School of Medicine (RSOM) at Stony Brook University. “We showed that the conventional understanding of the cause of hydrocephalus is not correct. Hydrocephalus is caused by the failure of the brain to absorb pulsatile energy from the heartbeat, not by the failure of the brain to absorb CSF.”
The research team illustrated through their work that the salient features of hydrocephalus are explained better as the result of malabsorption of pulsatile energy from the heartbeat than the malabsorption of CSF. They used an electrical circuit model of the pulsatile CSF dynamics of the cerebral windkessel system — which removes the heartbeat pulsations from the blood entering the brain so that capillary blood flow is smooth and safe — to simulate hydrocephalus caused by subarachnoid obstruction.
“This new understanding of hydrocephalus points to new treatment approaches based on the diversion of pulsatile energy,” the authors wrote.
They added that “the theory that hydrocephalus is caused by CSF malabsorption is inconsistent with a broad spectrum of experimental and clinical evidence.” And therefore, “We propose that hydrocephalus is a disorder of pulsatile dynamics, i.e., hydrocephalus is impairment of the cerebral windkessel system caused by high impedance of pulsatility in the CSF pathways.”
Egnor and colleagues stress that the windkessel theory is a new approach to the study of intracranial dynamics. The theory is a direct challenge to the traditional theory (Monro-Kellie doctrine), which obscures the pulsatile cause because of neuroscientists’ misguided century-long preoccupation with CSF formation and absorption.
The authors say they welcome scrutiny of the windkessel theory of hydrocephalus, which will add to the body of research for a better understanding and treatment of the condition, which they emphasize is long overdue. They also hope that future investigators study the windkessel dynamics and electrical circuit theory, just as past hydrocephalus researchers studied bulk CSF flow and pressure-volume curves.
An editorial in the same edition of JNS Pediatrics, titled “Hydrocephalus, pulsatility and the windkessel effect,” by a team of neurosurgery investigators not involved in the study, believes the new research is essential to advancing physicians’ understanding of hydrocephalus.
They wrote that despite some key questions remaining, “The authors are to be commended for this readable and understandable summary of CSF physiology according the windkessel theory. The electrodynamic model corresponds nicely to the physical conditions that the authors have chosen for this experiment.”
The editorial further endorsed the direction of the groundbreaking work, particularly in the context that hydrocephalus treatment with shunts to drain CSF — which did change hydrocephalus treatment from an often fatal disease to a manageable one — are also problematic.
Egnor says that he and colleagues will continue studying various forms of hydrocephalus and will include imaging studies as part of future research. They will also investigate new shunt designs for hydrocephalus. The research will involve multiple departments from the RSOM and Stony Brook University.
Co-authors for the JNS Pediatrics paper include Nahid Shirdel Abdolmaleki, Yicun Wang, Anand Ravishankar and Petar M. Djurić of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Stony Brook University; Racheed Mani, MD, of the Department of Neurology; and Susan Fiore of the Department of Neurosurgery in the RSOM.

Related Posts

  • Endo residents 2024 25 1025
    Sachem Dental Group Endodontics Scholarship Fund Established at School of Dental Medicine
  • Syed shah
    Shah Named Chair of the Department of Anesthesiology at the Renaissance School of Medicine
  • Hydrocephalusgettyimages
    The Cause of Hydrocephalus Reconsidered
College of Engineering and Applied Sciences Hydrocephalus neurology Neurosurgery Renaissance School of Medicine research









This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Born in Croatia and raised during times of war, Ivana Stolnik-Lourie ’16 understands firsthand the importance of witnessing events directly and reporting on them. When she came to the United States 13 years ago, Stolnik…
James J. DiCarlo, MD, PhD, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will present the 2026 Swartz Foundation Mind/Brain Lecture on Monday, March 30, at 4 pm on Staller Center’s Main Stage. His presentation, “AI…
The radio show Selected Shorts returns to Stony Brook Southampton on Friday, July 11, for an evening of humorous and intriguing short fiction, live at The Avram
Get the latest word on Stony Brook news, discoveries and people.




Stony Brook University Logo


Sb matters masthead white
© 2026 Stony Brook University
Get the latest word on Stony Brook news, discoveries and people.




Get the latest word on Stony Brook news,
discoveries and people.

source

How Federal Funding Cuts Will Cost 500,000 New Yorkers Their Health Insurance – THE CITY – NYC News
WBNS-TV Events – Composting in Milo-Grogan with Cultivate CDC – 10TV
Medi-Cal reduces dental care for undocumented, may force more dentists to turn away low-income patients – thebusinessjournal.com
Smokers are more likely to develop dementia, research finds | Health Watch – CBS News
NHC Mental Health Fellows Program opens applications – Port City Daily
Share This Article
Facebook Email Print
Previous Article ABC7 Los Angeles and Southern California | KABC Eyewitness News – ABC7 Los Angeles
Next Article Eagle Ridge Warriors vs Skyview Wolverines – Girls Varsity Soccer 04/18/2026 | Live & On Demand – NFHS Network
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Science
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Health
Join Us!
Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news, podcasts etc..
[mc4wp_form]
Zero spam, Unsubscribe at any time.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?