Ternary Health
Featured condition · CSF leak

Spinal CSF Leak

A leak of cerebrospinal fluid from the spinal dura — producing positional headaches, cognitive symptoms, and a diagnostic odyssey that routinely lasts years before reaching one of the handful of centers that can find and treat it.

Overview

What we mean when we say CSF leak.

Spinal CSF leak — also called spontaneous intracranial hypotension, or SIH — is a condition in which cerebrospinal fluid leaks from the dural sheath of the spine, reducing the cushioning volume around the brain. The signature symptom is an orthostatic headache that worsens with upright posture and improves when lying flat.

Beyond the headache, CSF leaks can produce cognitive dysfunction, tinnitus, nausea, cranial-nerve disturbances, and in severe cases behavioral changes. Imaging findings include brain sagging on MRI, pachymeningeal enhancement, and sometimes subdural collections — but these signs are often subtle and frequently missed on standard reads.

Strong association with connective-tissue differences, including hypermobile EDS. A meaningful fraction of cases follow trauma or medical procedures (epidurals, spinal surgery), but many are truly spontaneous.

Why it’s hard to navigate

The pattern we see in CSF leak cases.

Signals we look for

The Ternary Signal Library for CSF leak.

Our Signal Library codifies the specific patterns that matter in CSF leak — labs, genetic variants, imaging findings, symptom clusters, and comorbidity combinations. Your case is mapped against these signals in Stage 4 of the workflow; each activated signal is weighted and prioritized for your presentation.

Symptom patterns
  • Orthostatic headache — worse upright, better lying flat
  • Cognitive dysfunction — brain fog, memory, executive function
  • Cranial-nerve symptoms — tinnitus, hearing change, facial numbness
  • Autonomic — nausea, dizziness
  • Symptom duration and time-of-day pattern
Imaging signs
  • Brain sagging — Evans ratio, mamillopontine distance
  • Pachymeningeal enhancement
  • Subdural collections
  • Pituitary engorgement
  • Spinal CSF collection on specialized sequences
  • CT myelography / DSM findings — leak location and characterization
Connective-tissue & mechanical
  • Beighton score and 2017 hEDS criteria
  • Prior spinal procedures — epidurals, surgery
  • Trauma timeline
  • Venous or vascular dysfunction
  • Co-occurring MCAS or dysautonomia
Treatment history
  • Prior blood patches — non-targeted vs. targeted
  • Response patterns — full, partial, transient
  • Fibrin glue or surgical repair attempts
  • Symptom recurrence pattern after each intervention
  • Medication trials — caffeine, theophylline, midodrine
How we approach it

The Ternary Health approach to CSF leak.

01

Review symptom history, imaging findings (including subtle signs), and prior workup to assess the evidence supporting or excluding a CSF leak — and identify what's still missing.

02

Map the specialist landscape — compare centers by imaging protocols, procedural experience, and current turnaround — so the choice between them is made on data, not word of mouth.

03

Integrate associated connective-tissue features (hEDS, venous dysfunction, mast-cell) that influence diagnosis, anesthetic planning, and treatment response.

04

Build a structured plan for working up the case at one or more centers, with evidence-graded expectations for each next step.

The nine-stage workflow, applied

How a CSF leak case moves through our workflow.

Our nine-stage workflow is the same for every engagement. What changes per condition is the content at each stage — the records we pull, the signals we apply, the specialists we map, the pathways we evaluate. Below, how your case specifically would move through each stage.

Stage 01 · Days 0–2
Qualification
Fit screen confirms suspected or diagnosed CSF leak, symptom pattern consistent with SIH, and willingness to travel to a specialist center if required.
Stage 02 · Days 3–7
Intake & data aggregation
Records pull emphasizes brain and spine MRI (all available sequences), any CT myelography or DSM reports, prior blood patch records, and neurologic consultation notes. Symptom timeline built across years.
Stage 03 · Days 7–9
Case structuring
Case schema populated. Leak status (suspected / confirmed), symptom pattern coded, imaging findings cataloged. Connective-tissue features from any prior assessment captured.
Stage 04 · Days 9–12
Signal analysis
Ternary Signal Library for CSF leak applied — classic and atypical symptom clusters, imaging-subtlety signals, connective-tissue risk factors, and treatment-response history each weighted.
Stage 05 · Days 10–14
Evidence retrieval
Literature scan emphasizes the current specialist centers' published protocols — Cedars-Sinai, Stanford, Duke, Mayo, UCSF, University of Colorado — plus recent literature on dynamic imaging, fibrin glue, and surgical repair techniques.
Stage 06 · Days 14–17
Pathway mapping
Pathway map built across diagnostic workup (dynamic CT myelography, DSM, brain MRI with specific sequences), procedural (targeted patches, fibrin glue, surgical repair), and medical (conservative support, medications). Specialists mapped from our CSF-leak-specific Specialist Graph.
Stage 07 · Days 17–20
Synthesis & plan construction
Interventions scored on the Ternary Method. Sequencing typically: establish diagnosis before intervention; image before patch; consider connective-tissue context before surgical decisions.
Stage 08 · Days 20–25
Delivery & calibration
Findings call emphasizes center-choice logic and realistic wait-time expectations. Pre-consultation briefing materials prepared for whichever center is chosen.
Stage 09 · Days 25–55
Execution support
30 days of asynchronous follow-up through the diagnostic pathway — from imaging appointments through patch trials, with post-procedure debriefs captured.
Deliverables

What you receive.

  • A written case synthesis including imaging-interpretation framework
  • Specialist comparison across the handful of high-volume CSF-leak centers
  • Treatment-option map with sequencing logic
  • Integration with connective-tissue and co-occurring conditions
  • A written action plan and follow-up support through the diagnostic pathway
Common questions — CSF leak

What prospective CSF leak clients ask most.

Do I need a confirmed leak diagnosis to apply?
No. Many of our CSF-leak clients are in the diagnostic phase, with high clinical suspicion but inconclusive imaging. A large part of our work is evaluating whether the workup so far is sufficient and mapping what additional specialized imaging would resolve the question.
Can you help me choose between CSF-leak centers?
Yes. The small number of high-volume centers — Cedars-Sinai, Stanford, Duke, Mayo, UCSF, University of Colorado — have different imaging protocols, procedural philosophies, and current wait times. Our Specialist Graph captures these differences; your plan recommends the best fit for your case.
How long does the diagnostic pathway take?
Specialized imaging (dynamic CT myelography, DSM) typically requires a 2–4 month window from initial consultation at a specialist center, with treatment potentially months later. We help you sequence this realistically.
What if prior imaging was negative?
Negative standard imaging does not rule out a CSF leak. Specialized protocols performed at leak-specialist centers frequently identify leaks missed elsewhere. A key part of Stage 5 is evaluating what imaging has been done and what specialized studies would add clinical value.
Will you coordinate with my current neurologist?
We provide you with briefing materials to share with your current neurologist and post-consultation debriefs after specialist visits, so your local care team stays informed. We do not replace them; we make the multi-center pathway more navigable.

Ready for a case review?

Applications are reviewed within three business days.