ABSTRACT:Despite the great capacity for the pediatric brain to recover from stroke, the morbidity and mortality in children who harbor an arteriovenous malformation (AVM) remains high. This study examines the clinical data and management experience with 132 patients with brain AVM from 1949 to 1989. Although the high tendency for a childhood AVM to present with hemorrhage (79%) remained constant for the forty year study period, the associated morbidity and mortality of hemorrhage changed. The mortality rate from hemorrhage for the entire series was 25%, which was reduced from 39% to 16% after the introduction of computed tomography. The mortality from AVM hemorrhage since 1975 was dependent on location; 8 of 14 patients (57%) with a cerebellar AVM died from hemorrhage while only 2 of 44 patients (4.5%) with a cerebral hemisphere AVM died (p < 0.0001). Sixteen children (12%) presented with a chronic seizure disorder. Surgical excision of the malformation resulted in complete seizure control off anti-convulsant medication in 73% of patients. Although 21% of patients were treated non-operatively (many with terminal poor-grade hemorrhage), 79% had a surgical procedure with total AVM excision achieved in 70 patients (53.1%). Complete AVM resection was followed by a normal neurological outcome in 47 children (67%). Most partial excisions (n=9) and clipping of feeding arteries (n=7) were performed in the early years of this study, and did not provide protection from rehe-morrhage. Although conservative management has been advocated for selected non-hemorrhagic AVMs, we conclude that essentially all children with an AVM should be treated in order to eliminate the risk of hemorrhage. Long-term conservative management in pediatric patients is warranted only in patients with large AVMs not amenable to treatment using current multimodality techniques.
Thirteen cases of intracranial meningioma presenting in childhood were encountered at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto over a 51-year period. The clinical features, radiology, operative findings and outcome are reviewed.
The authors review the cases of 144 children with medulloblastoma treated between 1950 and 1980. Duration of time between onset of symptoms and initial treatment was less than 1 1/2 months in 51% of cases, and less than 3 months in 76%. The tumor was located in the cerebellar vermis in 93% of patients. Brainstem infiltration was noted in 32%. Classical medulloblastomas comprised 82% of the total number reviewed, and desmoplastic medulloblastomas 15%. The majority of desmoplastic medulloblastomas were found in the midline of the cerebellum and in patients under 10 years of age. The prognosis for patients with desmoplastic medulloblastomas was worse than that for children with classical medulloblastomas. Spontaneous hemorrhage associated with primary or recurrent medulloblastoma occurred in 5.6% of the patients. Supratentorial metastases were found in 14.6% of cases, spinal cord metastases in 12.5%, and systemic metastases in 9%. The overall 5-year survival rate was 47%, and the 10-year survival rate 42%. Extent of surgical excision proved to be a statistically significant prognostic factor. Two patients developed recurrence after the "period of risk" as defined by Collins' rule. Delayed complications of radiotherapy were found to be substantial. Intelligence quotient (IQ) testing on 16 survivors revealed verbal IQ, performance IQ, and full-scale IQ to be within the normal range in 11, seven, and nine cases, respectively. Two were retarded on all scores.
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