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Pediatric_Oncology_A_Comprehensive_Guide.pdf
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9 Brain Tumors

93

 

 

Nausea and vomiting:

Often in relation to headache

Nighttime vomiting

Visual disturbances (mostly abducens palsy):

Diplopia

Strabismus

Visual loss and/or visual field loss

Head turns to one side

Change of personality: Lethargy, apathy, irritability, somnolence

Head enlargement in infants and young children (less than 2 years of age)

9.6.2Focal Neurological Failures

Dependent on locations

Epileptic convulsions

Ataxia

Visual loss and/or visual field loss

Cranial nerve palsy

Peripheral neurological disturbances (see “Special Tumor Types”)

9.6.3Tumor Types and Symptoms According to Intracranial Location

9.6.3.1 Cerebral Hemisphere

Most frequent tumor types

Astrocytoma

Ependymoma

Oligodendroglioma

Meningioma

Main symptoms: focal cerebral dysfunction and/or epilepsy in cortical tumors; hemiplegia and visual field defects in subcortical tumors

Frontal: anterior frontal globe:

Few clinical signs until a large tumor evokes pressure; personality and emotional changes: blandness and indifference to surroundings

Gyrus precentralis to capsula interna: contralateral weakness of the face; of the extremities, change in handedness as early sign; disturbance of fluent speech but intact comprehension (Broca aphasia). Seizure type: adverse turning of the eyes and head toward the opposite side, focal tonic or clonic convulsion of the contralateral extremity

Temporoparietal

Focal seizure, with secondary generalization of seizure

Postictal, transient neurological deficit

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Seizure associated with contralateral hemisensory phenomena and with visual field defects (contralateral homonymous hemianopia)

Loss of stereognosis

Contralateral, homonymous hemianopia

Occipital

Visual field defects

Unior bilateral abducens weakness with diplopia and signs of increased intracranial pressure

Deep subcortical cerebral tumors

With contralateral extrapyramidal symptoms: tremor, athetosis, rigidity, hemiballismus

Thalamic involvement:

Contralateral hemiplegia

Increased intracranial pressure

Visual field defects

9.6.3.2 Parasellar Optic Chiasma Area

Tumors arise from pituitary gland and hypothalamus

Common tumor types

Craniopharyngioma

Optic glioma, astrocytoma, hypothalamic glioma, hypothalamic hamartoma

Hypophyseal adenoma

Chordoma, germinoma

Diencephalic syndrome:

In infants: anorexia, cachexia, and euphoria; nystagmus in about 50% of children

In children: hyperphagia and obesity; growth retardation, diabetes insipidus, hypogonadism

In adolescents: anorexia nervosa; in hypothalamic hamartoma: precocious puberty

Bitemporal hemianopia

Unilateral blindness with contralateral temporal hemianopia

Frequently optic atrophy

Internal hydrocephalus

In tumor progression: occlusion of foramen of Monro or aqueduct of Sylvius

Amenorrhea and galactorrhea (high prolactin secretion)

In adolescent girls with hypothalamic tumor

Gigantism

In adolescents with growth hormone producing eosinophilic adenoma

9.6.3.3 Pineal Area

Tumor in the third ventricle, the roof of the midbrain, and the aqueduct

9 Brain Tumors

95

 

 

Common tumor types

Pinealoblastoma

Teratoma

Germinoma

Astrocytoma of the corpus callosum or thalamus

Nongerminomatous germ cell tumor

Early symptoms: brain pressure caused by obstruction of cerebral fluid

Parinaud syndrome

Paralysis of conjugate upward gaze

Disturbed pupillary light reflex

Extension of tumor to midbrain

Disturbed ocular motor nerve function and extension with nystagmus, anisocoria, and paralysis of convergence ability

Caudal extension: tinnitus and bilateral deafness

In forward extension, eyelid retraction

Association with hypogonadism and precocious puberty

9.6.3.4 Posterior Fossa Tumors

Common tumor types

Cystic astrocytoma

Solid astrocytoma

Hemangioblastoma (with erythrocytosis and high serum level of erythropoietin in 50% of patients)

Symptoms

Ipsilateral cerebral dysfunction of the extremities: with tremor, dysmetria, rebound phenomenon, dysdiadochokinesia

Extension in the direction of fourth ventricle: signs of hydrocephalus (central nervous system (CNS)-mediated hypertension)

With extension to foramen magnum (herniation): neck pain, opisthotonus, paresthesiae of the upper extremities, high blood pressure with bradycardia, changes in vision, fever, bulbar signs (dysphagia, dysarthria)

9.6.3.5 Vermis Cerebelli

Tumor type

Often medulloblastoma with infiltration of the fourth ventricle

Symptoms

Symmetrical ataxia of the trunk

Signs of high intracranial pressure and cerebellar tonsillar herniation

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9.6.3.6 Fourth Ventricle

Tumor types

Choroid plexus carcinoma

Dermoid tumor or teratoma in infants

Symptom: high intracranial pressure

9.6.3.7 Brain Stem

Tumor type

Astrocytoma, WHO grade I–IV: infiltration into the brain stem

Symptoms:

Unilateral paralysis of cranial nerves VI and VII

Contralateral hemiparesis of the extremities with hyperreflexia, spasticity, positive Babinski sign, vertical nystagmus

Occasionally high intracranial pressure

Invasion of brain areas controlling vital functions result in a high death rate

Differential diagnosis

Tumors arising from external structures such as rhabdomyosarcoma, nonHodgkin lymphoma, neuroblastoma, or from primary brain tumors such as medulloblastoma

9.6.3.8 Cerebellopontine Angle Tumors

Tumor type

Acoustic neuroma

Symptoms and signs

Dysfunction of the auditory and vestibular nerves

Ipsilateral corneal reflex palsy or absence

9.6.3.9 Spinal Cord

Tumor types

Intramedullary

Astrocytoma

Oligodendroglioma

Ependymoma, often with cysts (differential diagnosis: syringomyelia)

Extramedullary and intradural tumors

Neurofibroma

Meningioma

Dermoid tumor

Teratoma

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