AI Article Synopsis

  • Posterior fossa syndrome (PFS) is a common complication after removing brain tumors in children, leading to symptoms like mutism and ataxia days post-surgery.
  • Recent studies show a link between PFS and changes in the inferior olivary nuclei (ION), observable through MRI months later.
  • This research found that immediate postoperative diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) could indicate changes in ION that may serve as early markers for predicting the onset of PFS in pediatric patients.

Article Abstract

Objective: Posterior fossa syndrome (PFS) is a common postoperative complication following resection of posterior fossa tumors in children. It typically presents 1 to 2 days after surgery with mutism, ataxia, emotional lability, and other behavioral symptoms. Recent structural MRI studies have found an association between PFS and hypertrophic olivary degeneration, which is detectable as T2 hyperintensity in the inferior olivary nuclei (IONs) months after surgery. In this study, the authors investigated whether immediate postoperative diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) of the ION can serve as an early imaging marker of PFS.

Methods: The authors retrospectively reviewed pediatric brain tumor patients treated at their institution, Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford, from 2004 to 2016. They compared the immediate postoperative DTI studies obtained in 6 medulloblastoma patients who developed PFS to those of 6 age-matched controls.

Results: Patients with PFS had statistically significant increased mean diffusivity (MD) in the left ION (1085.17 ± 215.51 vs 860.17 ± 102.64, p = 0.044) and variably increased MD in the right ION (923.17 ± 119.2 vs 873.67 ± 60.16, p = 0.385) compared with age-matched controls. Patients with PFS had downward trending fractional anisotropy (FA) in both the left (0.28 ± 0.06 vs 0.23 ± 0.03, p = 0.085) and right (0.29 ± 0.06 vs 0.25 ± 0.02, p = 0.164) IONs compared with age-matched controls, although neither of these values reached statistical significance.

Conclusions: Increased MD in the ION is associated with development of PFS. ION MD changes may represent an early imaging marker of PFS.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/2019.5.PEDS1964DOI Listing

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