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3.
Neurosurg Rev ; 43(2): 453-472, 2020 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30043262

RESUMO

Craniopharyngioma (CP) adherence represents a most baffling problem for the neurosurgeon. The highest priority of current surgical treatment is to maximize tumor removal without compromising the patients' long-term functional outcome. Surgical damage to the hypothalamus may be avoided or at least ameliorated with a precise knowledge regarding the type of adherence for each case. This article presents a comprehensive review of the pathological, surgical, and radiological sources of evidence supporting that CP adherence, despite being heterogenous, is characterized by repeating patterns. The key underlying factors of CP adherence are also discussed. Three components define the type of adherence for each case: (i) the intracranial structures attached to the tumor, (ii) the adherence morphology, and (iii) the adhesion strength. Combination of these three components gives rise to five hierarchical levels of increased risk of hypothalamic injury during tumor removal. Tumor topography has been identified as the major predictor of the type of CP adherence. The most extensive and strongest adhesions to the hypothalamus occur in CPs originated in the suprasellar cistern that secondarily invade the third ventricle (secondary intraventricular CPs) and in those originated within the third ventricle floor itself (not-strictly intraventricular CPs). Three findings observed on preoperative conventional MRI scans have proven to be reliable predictors of adherence severity. A position of the hypothalamus around the middle portion of the tumor, an amputated pituitary stalk, and an elliptical tumor shape points to the severe and critical risk levels, and in those cases, a safer limited removal is strongly recommended.


Assuntos
Craniofaringioma/cirurgia , Procedimentos Neurocirúrgicos/métodos , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/cirurgia , Aderências Teciduais/cirurgia , Craniofaringioma/complicações , Craniofaringioma/patologia , Gliose/complicações , Gliose/patologia , Gliose/cirurgia , Humanos , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/complicações , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/patologia , Aderências Teciduais/complicações , Aderências Teciduais/etiologia , Aderências Teciduais/patologia
4.
Neurosurg Focus ; 47(3): E7, 2019 09 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31473680

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Establishing the neurological localization doctrine for the contralateral hemispheric control of motor functions in the second half of the 19th century, researchers faced the challenge of recognizing false localizing signs, in particular paradoxical or ipsilateral hemiparesis (IH). Despite tremendous progress in current methods of neuroradiological and electrophysiological exploration, a complete understanding of this phenomenon has yet to be attained. METHODS: The authors researched the well-described cases of hemiparesis/hemiplegia ipsilateral to an intracranial lesion published in the scientific literature in the pre-MRI era (before 1980). A comprehensive review of the physiopathological mechanisms proposed for paradoxical hemiparesis throughout this period, as well as the pathological evidence substantiating them, is provided. RESULTS: A collection of 75 patients with hemiparesis/hemiplegia ipsilateral to the primary intracranial lesion reported between 1858 and 1979 were eligible for analysis. Most cases occurred in adults with supratentorial, slowly developing, extraparenchymatous mass lesions, such as neoplasms (38%) or chronic subdural hematomas (36%). Physiopathological theories proposed by the neurologists who investigated IH can be grouped into 4 major concepts: 1) lack of anatomical decussation of the corticospinal tract; 2) impaired functional activation of the contralateral hemisphere by the lesioned dominant hemisphere through the callosal connections; 3) Kernohan's notch phenomenon, or mechanical injury of the contralateral cerebral peduncle against the free edge of the tentorium; and 4) cerebrovascular dysfunction involving the contralateral hemisphere owing to kinking and mechanical flattening of the carotid artery contralateral to the primary intracranial lesion. CONCLUSIONS: IH represents a still underdiagnosed paradoxical neurological phenomenon. With the aid of modern neuroradiological and neurophysiological methods, Kernohan's peduncle notch mechanism has been confirmed to cause IH in many of the cases reported in recent decades. Nevertheless, alternative functional and/or vascular mechanisms must be investigated further for unexplained IH cases, in particular for transitory IH without evidence of peduncle injury. The historical theories reviewed in this paper represent a conceptual framework that may be helpful for this purpose.


Assuntos
Córtex Motor , Neurocirurgia/história , Paresia/história , Tratos Piramidais , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , Humanos , Córtex Motor/diagnóstico por imagem , Córtex Motor/fisiopatologia , Tratos Piramidais/diagnóstico por imagem , Tratos Piramidais/fisiopatologia
6.
World Neurosurg ; 120: e1245-e1278, 2018 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30240857

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: This study provides a systematic review and meta-analysis of psychiatric disorders caused by craniopharyngiomas and the hypothalamic alterations underlying these symptoms. METHODS: We investigated a collection of 210 craniopharyngiomas reported from 1823 to 2017 providing detailed clinical and pathologic information about psychiatric disturbances, including 10 of our own series, and compared the hypothalamic damage in this cohort with the present in a control cohort of 105 cases without psychiatric symptoms. RESULTS: Psychiatric disorders occurred predominantly in patients with craniopharyngiomas developing primarily at the infundibulotuberal region (45%) or entirely within the third ventricle (30%), mostly affecting adult patients (61%; P < 0.001). Most tumors without psychic symptoms developed beneath the third ventricle floor (53.5%; P < 0.001), in young patients (57%; P < 0.001). Psychiatric disturbances were classified in 6 major categories: 1) Korsakoff-like memory deficits, 66%; 2) behavior/personality changes, 48.5%; 3) impaired emotional expression/control, 42%; 4) cognitive impairments, 40%; 5) mood alterations, 32%; and 6) psychotic symptoms, 22%. None of these categories was associated with hydrocephalus. Severe memory deficits occurred with damage of the mammillary bodies (P < 0.001). Mood disorders occurred with compression/invasion of the third ventricle floor and/or walls (P < 0.012). Coexistence of other hypothalamic symptoms such as temperature/metabolic dysregulation or sleepiness favored the emergence of psychotic disorders (P < 0.008). Postoperative psychiatric outcome was better in strictly intraventricular craniopharyngiomas than in other topographies (P < 0.001). A multivariate model including the hypothalamic structures involved, age, hydrocephalus, and hypothalamic symptoms predicts the appearance of psychiatric disorders in 81% of patients. CONCLUSIONS: Craniopharyngiomas primarily involving the hypothalamus represent a neurobiological model of psychiatric and behavioral disorders.


Assuntos
Craniofaringioma/psicologia , Hipotálamo , Transtornos Mentais/etiologia , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/psicologia , Craniofaringioma/complicações , Craniofaringioma/fisiopatologia , Humanos , Hipotálamo/fisiopatologia , Transtornos Mentais/fisiopatologia , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/complicações , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/fisiopatologia
7.
Pituitary ; 21(4): 393-405, 2018 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29680871

RESUMO

A heterogeneous group of epithelial cystic tumors developed at the infundibulum and the third ventricle disconcerted pathologists at the dawn of the twentieth century. Very little was known at that time about the physiological role played by the pituitary gland, and there was almost complete ignorance regarding the function of the hypothalamus. Acromegaly, or enlargement of acral body parts, described in 1886 by Pierre Marie, was the only disease linked to primary hypertrophies of the pituitary gland, known as "pituitary strumas". A growing number of young patients manifesting an unexplained combination of physical and mental symptoms, including absent or delayed sexual maturation, progressive obesity, abnormal somnolence, and dementia-like changes in behavior were reported to present large solid-cystic tumors which characteristically expanded within the infundibulum and third ventricle, above an anatomically intact pituitary gland. Between 1899 and 1904, five seminal autopsy studies from different countries thoroughly described the anatomical relationships and histological features of this newly recognized type of infundibular tumors. These cases were instrumental in fostering the systematic investigation of similar lesions by the Austrian pathologist Jakob Erdheim (1874-1937), who in 1904 was able to classify these infundibulo-tuberal cysts under the common category of hypophyseal duct tumors. The pioneering American neurosurgeon Harvey Cushing (1869-1939) unsuccessfully attempted to surgically remove one of these cysts, for the first time in history, in 1902. The term "craniopharyngioma", chosen by Cushing in 1929 to designate these lesions, would eventually prevail over Erdheim's more accurate denomination, which linked their origin to squamous cell remnants derived from the embryological structures that give rise to the pituitary gland. This paper presents a comprehensive, renewed account of the five clinical-pathological reports which laid the groundwork for the proper clinical diagnosis, topographic conceptualization and pathological categorization of craniopharyngiomas.


Assuntos
Autopsia/métodos , Craniofaringioma/diagnóstico , Craniofaringioma/patologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Hipotálamo/patologia , Masculino , Doenças da Hipófise/diagnóstico , Doenças da Hipófise/patologia , Hipófise/diagnóstico por imagem , Hipófise/patologia , Adulto Jovem
10.
Neurosurg Rev ; 40(4): 559-575, 2017 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28550628

RESUMO

The field of pituitary surgery was born in the first decade of the twentieth century in Europe, and it evolved rapidly with the development of numerous innovative surgical techniques by some of the founding fathers of neurosurgery. This study investigates the pioneering Italian treatise on pituitary surgery, La Patologia Chirurgica dell'Ipofisi (Surgical Pathology of the Hypophysis), published in 1911 by Giovanni Verga (1879-1923), a surgeon from Pavía and one of Golgi's disciples. This little-known monograph compiles the earliest experience on pituitary surgery through the analysis of the first 50 procedures performed between 1903 and 1911. We conducted a biographical survey of Giovanni Verga and the motivations for his work on pituitary surgery. In addition, a systematic analysis of all original reports and historical documents about these pituitary procedures referenced in Verga's treatise was carried out. Verga's treatise provides a summary of the techniques employed and surgical outcomes for the first 50 attempted procedures of pituitary tumor removal. This monograph is the only scientific source that includes a complete account of the series of 10 pituitary tumors operated on by Sir Victor Horsley in the 1900s. Three major types of surgery were employed: (i) palliative procedures of craniectomy (n = 6); (ii) transcranial approaches to the pituitary gland, either subfrontal or subtemporal (n = 13); and (iii) transphenoidal routes to expose the sella turcica, either using an upper transnasal-transethmoidal approach (n = 19) or a lower sublabial/endonasal-transeptal one (n = 12). An operative mortality rate of 36% (n = 17) was observed in these early series. The pathological nature of the tumors operated on was available in 42 cases. There were 28 adenomas and 15 craniopharyngiomas. Sir Victor Horsley (1857-1916) and the Viennese surgeons Anton von Eiselsberg (1860-1939) and Oskar Hirsch (1877-1965) were the leading European figures in the development of pituitary surgery. Giovanni Verga's treatise La Patologia Chirurgica dell'Ipofisi is a fundamental, pioneering book in the history of pituitary surgery, a work that compiles the foundations of this field in Europe and the only authoritative source providing a complete record of pituitary procedures performed by Sir Victor Horsley.


Assuntos
Procedimentos Neurocirúrgicos/história , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/história , Europa (Continente) , História do Século XX , Humanos , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/diagnóstico , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/cirurgia , Sela Túrcica/cirurgia
11.
Endocrinol Diabetes Nutr ; 64(3): 182-184, 2017 03.
Artigo em Inglês, Espanhol | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28440760
12.
Pituitary ; 20(4): 409-421, 2017 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28265842

RESUMO

At the beginning of the twentieth century, the hypothalamus was known merely as an anatomical region of the brain lying beneath the thalamus. An increasing number of clinicopathological reports had shown the association of diabetes insipidus and adiposogenital dystrophy (Babinski-Fröhlich's syndrome), with pituitary tumors involving the infundibulum and tuber cinereum, two structures of the basal hypothalamus. The French physicians Jean Camus (1872-1924) and Gustave Roussy (1874-1948) were the first authors to undertake systematic, controlled observations of the effects of localized injuries to the basal hypothalamus in dogs and cats by pricking the infundibulo-tuberal region (ITR) with a heated needle. Their series of surgical procedures, performed between 1913 and 1922, allowed them to claim that both permanent polyuria and adiposogenital dystrophy were symptoms caused by damage to the ITR. Their results challenged the dominant doctrine of hypopituitarism as cause of diabetes insipidus and adiposogenital dystrophy that derived from the experiments performed by Paulescu and Cushing a decade earlier. With their pioneering research, Camus and Roussy influenced the experimental work on the hypothalamus performed by Percival Bailey and Frederic Bremer at Cushing's laboratory, confirming the hypothalamic origin of these symptoms in 1921. More importantly, they provided the foundations for the physiological paradigm of Neuroendocrinology, the hypothalamus' control over the endocrine secretions of the pituitary gland, as well as over water balance and fat metabolism. This article aims to credit Camus and Roussy for their groundbreaking, decisive contributions to postulate the hypothalamus being the brain region in control of endocrine homeostasis and energy metabolism.


Assuntos
Hipotálamo/metabolismo , Hipófise/metabolismo , Animais , Gatos , Diabetes Insípido/metabolismo , Diabetes Insípido/patologia , Cães , Sistema Endócrino/metabolismo , Sistema Endócrino/patologia , Humanos , Doenças Hipotalâmicas/metabolismo , Doenças Hipotalâmicas/patologia , Hipotálamo/patologia , Neuroendocrinologia , Hipófise/patologia , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/metabolismo , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/patologia
15.
Neurosurg Focus ; 41(6): E13, 2016 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27903121

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE Craniopharyngioma (CP) adherence strongly influences the potential for achieving a radical and safe surgical treatment. However, this factor remains poorly addressed in the scientific literature. This study provides a rational, comprehensive description of CP adherence that can be used for the prediction of surgical risks associated with the removal of these challenging lesions. METHODS This study retrospectively analyzes the evidence provided in pathological, neuroradiological, and surgical CP reports concerning 3 components of the CP attachment: 1) the intracranial structures attached to the tumor; 2) the morphology of the adhesion; and 3) the adhesion strength. From a total of 1781 CP reports published between 1857 and 2016, a collection of 500 CPs providing the best information about the type of CP attachment were investigated. This cohort includes autopsy studies (n = 254); surgical studies with a detailed description or pictorial evidence of CP adherence (n = 298); and surgical CP videos (n = 61) showing the technical steps for releasing the attachment. A predictive model of CP adherence in hierarchical severity levels correlated with surgical outcomes was generated by multivariate analysis. RESULTS The anatomical location of the CP attachment occurred predominantly at the third ventricle floor (TVF) (54%, n = 268), third ventricle walls (23%, n = 114), and pituitary stalk (19%, n = 94). The optic chiasm was involved in 56% (n = 281). Six morphological patterns of CP attachment were identified: 1) fibrovascular pedicle (5.4%); 2) sessile or patch-like (21%); 3) cap-like (over the CP top, 14%); 4) bowl-like (around the CP bottom, 13.5%); 5) ring-like (encircling central band, 19%); and 6) circumferential (enveloping the entire CP, 27%). Adhesion strength was classified in 4 grades: 1) loose (easily dissectible, 8%); 2) tight (requires sharp dissection, 32%); 3) fusion (no clear cleavage plane, 40%); and 4) replacement (loss of brain tissue integrity, 20%). The types of CP attachment associated with the worst surgical outcomes are the ring-like, bowl-like, and circumferential ones with fusion to the TVF or replacement of this structure (p < 0.001). The CP topography is the variable that best predicts the type of CP attachment (p < 0.001). Ring-like and circumferential attachments were observed for CPs invading the TVF (secondary intraventricular CPs) and CPs developing within the TVF itself (infundibulo-tuberal CPs). Brain invasion and peritumoral gliosis occurred predominantly in the ring-like and circumferential adherence patterns (p < 0.001). A multivariate model including the variables CP topography, tumor consistency, and the presence of hydrocephalus, infundibulo-tuberal syndrome, and/or hypothalamic dysfunction accurately predicts the severity of CP attachment in 87% of cases. CONCLUSIONS A comprehensive descriptive model of CP adherence in 5 hierarchical levels of increased severity-mild, moderate, serious, severe, and critical-was generated. This model, based on the location, morphology, and strength of the attachment can be used to anticipate the surgical risk of hypothalamic injury and to plan the degree of removal accordingly.


Assuntos
Craniofaringioma/classificação , Craniofaringioma/cirurgia , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/classificação , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/classificação , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/cirurgia , Adolescente , Adulto , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Estudos de Coortes , Craniofaringioma/diagnóstico por imagem , Feminino , Humanos , Lactente , Recém-Nascido , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/diagnóstico por imagem , Estudos Retrospectivos , Medição de Risco , Resultado do Tratamento , Adulto Jovem
17.
Pituitary ; 18(6): 838-43, 2015 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26093764

RESUMO

The birth of clinical neuroendocrinology can be dated to the year 1900, when the French neurologist Joseph Babinski (1857-1932) described a particular syndrome of adiposity and sexual infantilism in an adolescent with a craniopharyngioma expanding at the base of the brain. This condition of adipose-genital dystrophy, also known as Babinski-Fröhlich syndrome, represented the first clinical evidence that the brain controlled endocrine functions. Adipose-genital dystrophy forms part of infundibulo-tuberal syndrome, which groups the endocrine, metabolic and behavioral disturbances caused by lesions involving the upper neurohypophysis (median eminence) and the adjacent basal hypothalamus (tuber cinereum). This syndrome was originally described by the French neuropsychiatrists Henri Claude (1869-1946) and Jean Lhermitte (1877-1959) in 1917, also in a patient with a craniopharyngioma. This type of tumor involves specifically the infundibulo-tuberal region of the hypothalamus, providing a clinical model to conceptualize the separation of hypophyseal and hypothalamic functions. The French School of Neurology analyzed and reported the symptoms associated with dysfunction of the basal hypothalamus by craniopharyngiomas and other types of tumors, influencing significantly the development of clinical neuroendocrinology. Experimental lesions performed in the tuber cinereum by the French physiologists Jean Camus (1872-1924) and Gustave Roussy (1874-1948) demonstrated unmistakably the anatomical origin of infundibulo-tuberal syndrome in the basal hypothalamus. This article reviews the original findings on infundibulo-tuberal syndrome reported by the French School of Neurology in the first decades of the twentieth century and the great influence this school had on modern conceptions of hypothalamic control over endocrine functions and behavior.


Assuntos
Neuroendocrinologia/história , Craniofaringioma/diagnóstico , França , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , Humanos , Hipotálamo/patologia , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/diagnóstico
18.
Pituitary ; 18(5): 642-57, 2015 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25527245

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Infundibulo-tuberal syndrome groups endocrine, metabolic and behavioral disturbances caused by lesions involving the upper neurohypophysis (median eminence) and adjacent basal hypothalamus (tuber cinereum). It was originally described by Henri Claude and Jean Lhermitte in 1917, in a patient with a craniopharyngioma. This study investigates the clinical, pathological and surgical evidence verifying the infundibulo-tuberal syndrome caused by craniopharyngiomas (CPs). METHODS: A systematic retrospective review of craniopharyngiomas reported in French literature between 1705 and 1973 was conducted. A total of 128 well described reports providing a comprehensive clinical and pathological description of the tumors were selected. This series represents the historical French cohort of CPs reported in the pre-CT/MRI era. RESULTS: Three major syndromes caused by CPs were categorized: pituitary syndrome (35%), infundibulo-tuberal syndrome (52%) and hypothalamic syndrome (49%). CP topography was significantly related to the type of syndrome described (p < 0.001). Infundibulo-tuberal syndrome occurred in CPs which replaced or invaded the third ventricle floor. In contrast, the majority of sellar/suprasellar CPs growing below the third ventricle showed a pituitary syndrome (82%). Cases with hypothalamic syndrome were characterized by anatomical integrity of the pituitary gland and stalk (p = 0.033) and occurred predominantly in adults older than 41 years old (p < 0.005). Among infundibulo-tuberal symptoms, abnormal somnolence was not related with the presence of hydrocephalus. All squamous-papillary CPs presented psychiatric disturbances (p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: This historical CP cohort evidences a clinical-topographical correlation between the patient's type of syndrome and the anatomical structures involved by the tumor along the hypophysial-hypothalamic axis.


Assuntos
Ventrículos Cerebrais/patologia , Craniofaringioma/complicações , Doenças Hipotalâmicas/etiologia , Hipotálamo/patologia , Doenças da Hipófise/etiologia , Hipófise/patologia , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/complicações , Adolescente , Adulto , Idoso , Ventrículos Cerebrais/fisiopatologia , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Craniofaringioma/patologia , Craniofaringioma/fisiopatologia , Feminino , França , Humanos , Doenças Hipotalâmicas/patologia , Doenças Hipotalâmicas/fisiopatologia , Hipotálamo/fisiopatologia , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Invasividade Neoplásica , Doenças da Hipófise/patologia , Doenças da Hipófise/fisiopatologia , Hipófise/fisiopatologia , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/patologia , Neoplasias Hipofisárias/fisiopatologia , Prognóstico , Estudos Retrospectivos , Fatores de Risco , Síndrome , Adulto Jovem
19.
Neurocir. - Soc. Luso-Esp. Neurocir ; 25(5): 211-239, sept.-oct. 2014. ilus, tab
Artigo em Espanhol | IBECS | ID: ibc-128154

RESUMO

INTRODUCCIÓN Y OBJETIVOS: Este estudio analiza las evidencias patológicas y de imagen de resonancia magnética que definen la topografía de los craneofaringiomas y permiten una clasificación de las lesiones según el riesgo de daño hipotalámico que estas asocian. MATERIAL Y MÉTODOS: Se ha realizado un análisis sistemático de los métodos de clasificación topográfica empleados en las series quirúrgicas de craneofaringiomas descritas en la literatura (n = 145 series, 4.588 craneofaringiomas). También se analizaron las relaciones topográficas de casos individuales intervenidos y bien descritos de la literatura (n = 224 casos) y de casos estudiados en autopsias (n = 201 casos). Finalmente, se analizaron y compararon los estudios prequirúrgicos y posquirúrgicos de imagen de resonancia magnética de craneofaringiomas bien descritos (n = 130) para establecer un modelo diagnóstico topográfico en 3 ejes de la lesión, que permite anticipar cualitativamente el riesgo quirúrgico asociado de daño hipotalámico. RESULTADOS: Las 2 principales variables pronósticas que definen la topografía del craneofaringioma son su posición con respecto al diafragma selar y la afectación del suelo del tercer ventrículo. Un modelo diagnóstico de 5 variables, que son: edad del paciente, existencia de hidrocefalia o de alteraciones del comportamiento, posición relativa de los hipotálamos y el valor del ángulo mamilar, permiten diferenciar craneofaringiomas supraselares que comprimen el tercer ventrículo (craneofaringiomas seudointraventriculares) de lesiones estrictamente intraventriculares o aquellas con un crecimiento primario en el suelo del tercer ventrículo (craneofaringiomas infundibulotuberales o no estrictamente intraventriculares). CONCLUSIONES: Un modelo de clasificación topográfica de los craneofaringiomas en 3 ejes que incluya el grado de infiltración del hipotálamo es útil para la planificación del abordaje y el grado de resección. Los craneofaringiomas infundibulotuberales representan un 42% de los casos y muestran una adherencia fuerte y circunferencial al suelo del tercer ventrículo, asociando un riesgo de daño hipotalámico del 50%. El abordaje transesfenoidal endoscópico permite valorar la adherencia tumoral hipotalámica bajo visión directa


INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES: This study evaluates the pathological and magnetic resonance imaging evidence to define the precise topographical relationships of craniopharyngiomas and to classify these lesions according to the risks of hypothalamic injury associated with their removal. MATERIAL AND METHODS: An extensive, systematic analysis of the topographical classification models used in the surgical series of craniopharyngiomas reported in the literature(n = 145 series, 4,588 craniopharyngiomas) was performed. Topographical relationships of well-described operated craniopharyngiomas (n = 224 cases) and of non-operated cases reported in autopsies (n = 201 cases) were also analysed. Finally, preoperative and postoperative magnetic resonance imaging studies displayed in craniopharyngiomas reports (n = 130) were compared to develop a triple-axis model for the topographical classification of the selesions with qualitative information regarding the associated risk of hypothalamic injury. RESULTS: The 2 major variables with prognostic value to define the topography of a craniopharyngioma are its position relative to the sellar diaphragm and its degree of invasion of the third ventricle floor. A multivariate diagnostic model including 5 variables -patient age, presence of hydrocephalus and/or psychiatric symptoms, the relative position of the hypothalamus and the mammillary body angle- makes it possible to differentiate suprasellar craniopharyngiomas displacing the third ventricle upwards (pseudointraventricular craniopharyngiomas) from either strictly intraventricular craniopharyngiomas or lesions developing primarily within the third ventricle floor (infundibulo-tuberal or not strictly intraventricular craniopharyngiomas). CONCLUSIONS: A triple-axis topographical model for craniopharyngiomas that includes the degree of hypothalamus invasion is useful in planning the surgical approach and degree of resection. Infundibulo-tuberal craniopharyngiomas represent 42% of all cases. These lesions typically show tight, circumferential adhesion to the third ventricle floor, with their removal being associated with a 50% risk of hypothalamic injury. The endoscopically-assisted extended transsphenoidal approach provides a proper view to assess the degree and extension of craniopharyngioma adherence to the hypothalamus


Assuntos
Humanos , Craniofaringioma/cirurgia , Mapeamento Encefálico/métodos , Neoplasias Encefálicas/cirurgia , Distinções e Prêmios , Fatores de Risco , Terceiro Ventrículo/anatomia & histologia , Hipotálamo/anatomia & histologia , Corpos Mamilares/anatomia & histologia , Túber Cinéreo/anatomia & histologia
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