Treatment for Chiari malformation depends on your condition. If you have no symptoms, your health care professional may recommend no treatment other than monitoring with regular exams and MRIs.
When headaches or other types of pain are the primary symptom, your health care professional may recommend pain medicine.
Reducing pressure with surgery
Chiari malformation that causes symptoms is usually treated with surgery. The goal is to prevent more damage to the central nervous system. Surgery also can ease or stabilize symptoms.
Surgery can reduce pressure on the cerebellum and spinal cord and restore the usual flow of spinal fluid.
The most common surgery for Chiari malformation is called posterior fossa decompression. Surgery involves removing a small section of bone in the back of the skull. This relieves pressure by giving the brain more room.
During surgery, the covering of the brain called the dura mater may be opened. Also, a patch may be sewn in place to enlarge the covering and provide more room for the brain. This patch may be an artificial material, or it could be tissue harvested from a different part of the body.
Your surgeon also may remove a small portion of the spinal column to relieve pressure on the spinal cord and allow more space.
The surgical technique may vary, depending on whether you have a fluid-filled cavity called a syrinx or if you have fluid in your brain, known as hydrocephalus. If you have a syrinx or hydrocephalus, you may need a tube called a shunt to drain the excess fluid.
Surgical risks and follow-up
Surgery involves risks, including the possibility of infection, fluid in the brain, cerebrospinal fluid leakage or trouble with wound healing. Talk about the risks and benefits with your surgeon when deciding whether surgery is the most appropriate treatment for you.
The surgery reduces symptoms in most people. But if nerve injury in the spinal canal has already occurred, this procedure won't reverse the damage.
After the surgery, you'll need regular follow-up exams with your health care professional. This includes regular imaging tests to assess the outcome of surgery and the flow of cerebrospinal fluid.