## Correct Answer: C. Aqueductal stenosis Aqueductal stenosis is the most common cause of congenital hydrocephalus and ventriculomegaly in newborns, accounting for approximately 40–50% of all cases of congenital hydrocephalus in Indian pediatric populations. The aqueduct of Sylvius is the narrowest portion of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pathway, connecting the third and fourth ventricles. Stenosis at this site creates an obstructive (non-communicating) hydrocephalus, preventing CSF flow from the lateral and third ventricles into the fourth ventricle and subarachnoid space. This leads to progressive accumulation of CSF proximal to the obstruction, causing symmetric enlargement of the lateral and third ventricles while the fourth ventricle remains normal or small. The condition may be X-linked recessive (L1CAM gene mutations) or sporadic. Prenatal ultrasound typically shows ventriculomegaly (ventricular width >10 mm after 18 weeks) with a small or normal fourth ventricle, which is the key discriminating feature. Postnatal presentation includes signs of raised intracranial pressure: bulging fontanelle, separated sutures, developmental delay, and seizures. Management involves ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt placement, the standard of care in Indian pediatric neurosurgery centers. Early recognition and shunting prevent irreversible neurological damage and improve neurodevelopmental outcomes. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Dandy-Walker syndrome** — Dandy-Walker syndrome is a less common cause of ventriculomegaly (accounts for ~5–10% of congenital hydrocephalus) and is characterized by hypoplasia/agenesis of the cerebellar vermis with cystic dilatation of the fourth ventricle and elevation of the tentorium. While it does cause ventriculomegaly, aqueductal stenosis is significantly more prevalent. Dandy-Walker typically presents with a dilated fourth ventricle (not small), which helps differentiate it from aqueductal stenosis on imaging. **B. Arnold-Chiari malformation** — Arnold-Chiari malformation (tonsillar herniation through the foramen magnum) is a rare cause of ventriculomegaly in newborns and more commonly presents with progressive symptoms in older children or adults. It may cause hydrocephalus secondarily through obstruction at the foramen magnum, but aqueductal stenosis is far more frequent as a primary cause of neonatal ventriculomegaly. Chiari malformation is often associated with spina bifida, not isolated ventriculomegaly. **D. Arachnoid Villi malformation** — Arachnoid villi malformation is not a recognized primary cause of congenital ventriculomegaly. Arachnoid villi dysfunction may theoretically impair CSF reabsorption in communicating hydrocephalus, but this is extremely rare and not a standard diagnosis in pediatric neurology. The question asks for the most common cause, and arachnoid villi pathology does not feature in the differential of neonatal ventriculomegaly in Indian pediatric textbooks. ## High-Yield Facts - **Aqueductal stenosis** accounts for 40–50% of congenital hydrocephalus cases and is the single most common cause of neonatal ventriculomegaly. - **Non-communicating hydrocephalus** pattern: dilated lateral and third ventricles with a small or normal fourth ventricle is pathognomonic for aqueductal obstruction. - **Prenatal diagnosis**: ventriculomegaly >10 mm on second-trimester ultrasound with small fourth ventricle raises suspicion; postnatal MRI confirms diagnosis. - **X-linked aqueductal stenosis** (L1CAM mutations) is the most common genetic form; sporadic cases are also frequent in Indian populations. - **VP shunt** is the standard treatment; early intervention (within first weeks of life) prevents irreversible brain damage and improves neurodevelopmental outcomes. - **Clinical presentation**: bulging anterior fontanelle, separated cranial sutures, poor feeding, irritability, and developmental delay in the first weeks of life. ## Mnemonics **AQUEDUCT = Most Common Hydrocephalus** **A**queductal stenosis → **40–50%** of congenital hydrocephalus. **Q**uick diagnosis on prenatal ultrasound (small 4th ventricle). **U**se VP shunt early. **E**arly intervention = better neuro outcomes. **D**ilated 3rd & lateral ventricles (not 4th). **U**sually X-linked or sporadic. **C**linical signs: bulging fontanelle, seizures. **T**reatment: neurosurgery referral. **Small 4th Ventricle = Aqueductal Obstruction** When you see ventriculomegaly with a **small 4th ventricle** on imaging, think **aqueductal stenosis** (non-communicating). Dandy-Walker has a **dilated 4th ventricle**; Chiari has **tonsillar herniation**. This imaging distinction is the key to rapid diagnosis. ## NBE Trap NBE may pair Dandy-Walker syndrome with ventriculomegaly to distract students who remember it as a cause of hydrocephalus; however, aqueductal stenosis is significantly more common as the primary cause in newborns. The trap is frequency vs. association—Dandy-Walker does cause ventriculomegaly, but it is not the most common cause. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian pediatric practice, a newborn presenting with a bulging fontanelle and ventriculomegaly on postnatal cranial ultrasound should prompt immediate imaging (MRI/CT) to assess the fourth ventricle size. A small fourth ventricle virtually clinches aqueductal stenosis, and early VP shunt placement within the first 2–4 weeks of life significantly improves long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes—a critical point for bedside decision-making in tertiary centers. _Reference: OP Ghai Pediatrics Ch. 28 (Neurology); Harrison Ch. 381 (Hydrocephalus); Robbins Ch. 28 (Congenital Anomalies of CNS)_
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