Title of article :
Posterior Fossa Tumor in Children
Author/Authors :
TABATABAEI، Seyed Mahmoud نويسنده Professor of Neurosurgery, Mehrad Hospital, Functional Neurosurgery Research Center of ShohadaTajrish Hospital, , , SEDDIGHI، Afsoun نويسنده Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery, ShohadaTajrish Hospital, Functional Neurosurgery Research Center of Shohada Tajrish Hospital, , , SEDDIGHI، Amir Saied نويسنده Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery, ShohadaTajrish Hospital, Functional Neurosurgery Research Center of Shohada Tajrish Hospital, Shahid Beheshti ,
Issue Information :
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی - سال 2012
Abstract :
Objective
Primary brain tumors are the most common solid neoplasms of childhood,
representing 20% of all pediatric tumors. The best current estimates place the
incidence between 2.76 and 4.28/100,000 children per year. Compared with
brain tumors in adults, a much higher percentage of pediatric brain tumors
arise in the posterior fossa. Infratentorial tumors comprise as many as two thirds
of all pediatric brain tumors in some large series. Tumor types that most often
occur in the posterior fossa include medulloblastoma, ependymoma, cerebellar
astrocytoma and brainstem glioma.
Materials & Methods
All pediatric cases of posterior fossa tumor that were considered for surgery
from 1981 to 2011 were selected and the demographic data including age,
gender and tumor characteristics along with the location and pathological
diagnosis were recorded. The surgical outcomes were assessed according to
pathological diagnosis.
Results
Our series consisted of 84 patients (52 males, 32 females). Cerebellar
symptoms were the most common cause of presentation (80.9%) followed
by headache (73.8%) and vomiting (38.1%). The most common histology
was medulloblastoma (42.8%) followed by cerebellar astrocytoma (28.6%),
ependymoma (14.3%), brainstem glioma (7.2%) and miscellaneous pathologies
(e.g., dermoid, andtuberculoma) (7.2%).
Conclusion
The diagnosis of brain tumors in the general pediatric population remains
challenging. Most symptomatic children require several visits to a physician
before the correct diagnosis is made. These patients are often misdiagnosed
for gastrointestinal disorders. Greater understanding of the clinical presentation
of these tumors and judicious use of modern neuroimaging techniques should
lead to more efficacious therapies
Journal title :
Iranian Journal of Child Neurology (IJCN)
Journal title :
Iranian Journal of Child Neurology (IJCN)