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1.
Journal of Clinical Pediatrics ; (12): 813-816, 2015.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-482435

ABSTRACT

Objective To investigate the relationships among cerebellar mutism (CM), relapsed medulloblastoma (MB) and the primary tumor location.MethodsA retrospective analysis was conducted in 114 children over 3 years old with MB from November 2011 to April 2015.ResultsThe median onset age was 84.7 months (36.4 to 184.7 months) in 114 children with MB (77 boys and 37 girls), of whom there were 48 cases of recurrence. There were twenty two cases of CM and the overall incidence of CM was 19.3% (22/114). The incidence of CM was 19.7% (13/66) in non-recurrent cases and 18.8% (9/48) in recur-rent cases, and there was no signiifcant difference between two groups (P=0.899). The incidence of CM was 17.6% (9/51) in cas-es with primary tumor in the fourth ventricle, 7.1% (1/14) in cases with primary tumor in the cerebellar vermis, 21.4% (3/14) in cases with primary tumor in both fourth ventricle and cerebellar vermis, 45.5% (5/11) in cases with primary tumor in fourth ven-tricle and other parts of the brain, and 50.0% (4/8) in cases with primary tumor in cerebellar vermis and other parts of the brain. No CM incidence was observed in cases with primary tumor in central nerve system except for the fourth ventricle and cerebellar vermis. The incidence of CM between the cases with fourth ventricle/cerebellar vermis involvement and those without fourth ventricle/ cerebellar vermis involvement had signiifcant difference (P=0.039). ConclusionsThere is no relationship between CM and relapsed MB. Children with MB whose primary tumor is located in the fourth ventricle and/or the cerebellar vermis is susceptible to CM.

2.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-147155

ABSTRACT

Cerebellar mutism syndrome (CMS) was first described by Rekate et al in 1985. This syndrome is a common complication of posterior fossa surgery in children with range of 11-29% and usually manifests as diminished speech, hypotonia, and ataxia. The cause is due to bilateral pertubation of the dentate nuclei and their efferent pathways by edema, perfusional defects, axonal damage or metabolic disturbances. Other rare causes of CMS like acute subdural hematoma of the posterior fossa, head injury, brainstem glioma surgery, meningitis and basilar artery occlusion have also been reported. CMS after supracerebellar resection of the pineal tumor is a very rare with very few cases reported. We report such a case in a 10- year old boy who underwent excision of a pineal tumor through the infratentorial supracerebellar route.

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