Overtreatment by radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy for central nervous system tumors in infancy and childhood may be deleterious, so the recognition of surgically curable clinicopathological entities is mandatory. The dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor is a complex multinodular lesion consisting of glial nodules, associated with a specific glioneuronal element and/or with focal cortical dysplasia, and occurring in young patients presenting with intractable, mostly complex partial, seizures without neurological deterioration. We report on 14 patients; 9 were from a series of 600 pediatric patients with intracranial central nervous system tumors studied at a single institution from 1988 to 1993, and 5 were referred from other pediatric hospitals. Six tumors were frontal, six were temporal, one was parietal, and one was occipitoparietal. Computed tomographic scans disclosed hypodense lesions with cystic appearances in 4 patients and slight focal postcontrast enhancements in only 2 patients, whereas magnetic resonance imaging, available for 7 of 14 patients, showed hypointense lesions in T1-weighted images and hyperintense lesions in T2-weighted images. Deformities of the overlying cranium were also observed in five patients. The age range at the time of surgery (excluding a 20-year-old male patient who underwent surgery at the main pediatric hospital) was 2.6 to 13 years, with a mean of 6.68 years. The male to female patient ratio was 10:4, and the duration of symptoms was 0.2 to 6 years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1227/00006123-199503000-00005 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!