Long-term effects of cranial irradiation for childhood malignancy on sleep in adulthood.

Eur J Endocrinol

Netherlands Institute for Brain Research and Institute for Clinical and Experimental Neuroscience, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Published: April 2004

Background: Cranial radiation therapy (CRT) is required for successful treatment of a variety of brain tumours in childhood.

Objective: To investigate whether childhood CRT leads to altered sleep-wakefulness organization in adulthood, and to identify the determinants of such alterations.

Subjects And Methods: Subjective (questionnaires) and objective (actigraphy) measures of circadian rhythmicity and sleep were assessed in 25 individuals, 8-29 years after CRT for medulloblastoma (n=17) or other intracranial tumours (n=8), and in a group of 34 age-matched healthy individuals. Serum GH peak during insulin-induced hypoglycaemia and serum concentrations of prolactin and leptin (expressed per fat mass) were determined in the CRT group.

Results: The CRT group showed a markedly increased sleep duration (8.66 h, compared with 7.66 h in controls). In addition, the sleep-wake rhythm showed greater amplitude and less fragmentation, and less tolerance for alterations in the timing of sleep. Regression analysis showed both radiation dosage and neuroendocrine status to be determinants of sleep changes, suggesting that some of the alterations may be normalized with hormone supplementation.

Conclusion: The present study shows that high-dose cranial radiation therapy in childhood is associated with objective and subjective changes in the sleep-wake rhythm in adulthood.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/eje.0.1500503DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cranial radiation
8
radiation therapy
8
sleep-wake rhythm
8
sleep
5
crt
5
long-term effects
4
effects cranial
4
cranial irradiation
4
irradiation childhood
4
childhood malignancy
4

Similar Publications

A 65-year-old patient presented with recurrent, locally advanced poorly differentiated thyroid cancer despite 2 neck surgeries, and with newly diagnosed brain and skull base metastases. He was treated with palliative stereotactic radiosurgery to the brain and skull base lesions. Thereafter, as no targetable genetic alteration was identified and antiangiogenic multikinase inhibitors were deemed at high risk of hemorrhagic complications, off-label systemic therapies were considered.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Intrafraction motion in intra-cranial multi-target stereotactic radiosurgery plans: A multi-institutional investigation on robustness.

Phys Med

January 2025

Centre for Medical and Radiation Physics, University of Wollongong, NSW, Australia; St George Cancer Care Centre, St George Hospital, Kogarah, NSW, Australia; School of Physics, University of Sydney, Camperdown, NSW, Australia.

Purpose: Even with modern immobilisation devices, some amount of intrafraction patient motion is likely to occur during stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) delivery. The aim of this work was to investigate how robustness of plans to intrafraction motion is affected by plan geometry and complexity.

Methods: In 2018, the Trans-Tasman Radiation Oncology Group conducted a multiple-target SRS international planning challenge, the data from which was utilised in this study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Metastases to the pituitary gland are a rare finding, with breast and lung being the most common metastases in this anatomical region. Pituitary melanoma metastases reports are thus sparse, and both diagnosis and treatment are challenging. We present the case of a 66-year-old woman with pituitary melanoma metastasis who presented with symptoms of anterior pituitary dysfunction and headache.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Multidisciplinary treatment is necessary in glioblastoma with extracerebral metastases.

Strahlenther Onkol

January 2025

Department of Radiation Oncology, University Hospital of Muenster, Albert-Schweitzer-Campus 1, Building A1, 48149, Muenster, Germany.

Purpose: While glioblastoma is the most common malignant brain tumor in adults, extracerebral manifestations are very rare in this highly aggressive disease with poor prognosis.

Methods: We conducted a systematic literature review in the PubMed database and complemented the data by inclusion of a case treated in our clinic. In this context, we report on a 60-year-old woman with a right frontal glioblastoma, IDH wildtype, MGMT methylated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Magnetic Resonance Acoustic Radiation Force Imaging (MR-ARFI).

J Magn Reson Imaging

January 2025

Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.

This review covers the theoretical background, pulse sequence considerations, practical implementations, and multitudes of applications of magnetic resonance acoustic radiation force imaging (MR-ARFI) described to date. MR-ARFI is an approach to encode tissue displacement caused by the acoustic radiation force of a focused ultrasound field into the phase of a MR image. The displacement encoding is done with motion encoding gradients (MEG) which have traditionally been added to spin echo-type and gradient recalled echo-type pulse sequences.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!