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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The majority of pediatric neoplasias of the brain are midline growths in the posterior fossa. These mass lesions lead to obstruction of cerebrospinal fluid circulation and cause increased intracranial pressure. Affected children typically present with insidious complaints of headache and vomiting. Ataxia, cranial nerve palsies, or pyramidal tract signs may be present at the time the diagnosis is entertained. In the reports describing pathognomonic clinical features of posterior fossa tumors, an accelerated presentation with minimal prodromal events has not been emphasized. This report details the case of a child with a cerebellar medulloblastoma who presented with abrupt onset of fever, nuchal rigidity, and altered mental status. Emergency department misdiagnosis occurred.
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PMID:Erroneous diagnosis within the cranial vault. 140 86

Children whose brain tumor involves two or more compartments at presentation differ clinically and pathologically from children whose brain tumor is confined to one compartment. In this study of 3,291 children with a brain tumor, at least 10% had a tumor that occupied two or three compartments at first hospitalization. Infratentorial tumors occupying multiple compartments were 1.7 times more likely to involve the cervicomedullary junction than the mesodiencephalic junction. Younger children (1-3 years) were more likely to have had multiple compartment tumors than older children. Children whose tumor was limited to the infratentorial compartment had a longer survival than children whose tumor also occupied other compartments. Ependymoma, anaplastic ependymoma, and astrocytoma (nos) were over represented among infratentorial multiple compartment tumors. Pilocytic astrocytoma, primitive neuroectodermal tumor (medulloblastoma), and desmoplastic medulloblastoma were less likely to have occupied multiple compartments at the time of the first surgical exploration. The distributions of histologic features in tumors at the cervicomedullary junction differed from those in tumors limited to the posterior fossa or to the spinal canal. Seizures were more likely if the tumor was confined to the supratentorial compartment, whereas nausea or vomiting and headache were more likely if the tumor was confined to the infratentorial compartment. Children whose tumor was confined to the spinal canal were significantly more likely to have bladder symptoms and back and/or abdominal pain than those whose tumor also involved compartments above the foramen magnum. We conclude that brain tumors apparently confined to one compartment at presentation are biologically and structurally different from tumors evident in two or more compartments.
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PMID:Childhood brain tumors that occupy more than one compartment at presentation. Multiple compartment tumors. 146 64

20 patients with malignant brain tumors in childhood were treated according to a regimen which included initial surgery, preradiation chemotherapy and subsequent irradiation. The chemotherapy consisted of alternating cycles of high-dose methotrexate (12 g/m2) and "8 drugs in 1 day" (Bleyer, 1983). Each cycle was to be given up to six times, as tolerated. The diagnoses were medulloblastoma in 10 cases, astrocytoma in 5 cases, ependymoma and PNET in 2 patients each, and malignant mesenchymoma in 1 case. 15 patients were previously untreated, 5 patients experienced relapse after a different first line therapy and a longer time interval. 8 patients are in continuous complete remission for 13 to 54 months. The toxicity upon the bone marrow, the kidney and the inner ear was tolerable. Long lasting emesis contributed a marked problem to the patients but did not cause abbreviation of the therapy. The neurotoxicity was notably mild. Three episodes of generalized seizures were seen without subsequent sequelae, four cases of peripheral neuropathy were attributable to vincristine. A leukoencephalopathy was neither detected on clinical grounds nor on neuroradiological imaging. Therapy related deaths were not seen. We conclude that the combination of HD-MTX and "8 in 1" markedly contributes to the intensification of the chemotherapy for malignant brain tumors in childhood. In the setting as preradiation chemotherapy the toxicity is tolerable.
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PMID:[High dosage methotrexate in combination with "8 in 1" in therapy of pediatric grade III/IV brain tumors]. 158 54

A nine-day-old female with cerebellar medulloblastoma treated by surgical and radiation therapy is reported. She suffered from vomiting within a few days after birth. Subsequently, her head became enlarged and she was admitted to our hospital. CT scan on admission showed a large mass lesion at the cerebellum expanding to the pineal portion, and marked hydrocephalus. At the age of 14 days, a ventriculo-peritoneal shunt was carried out, and at the age of 67 days, radical resection of the tumor was performed. The histopathological diagnosis was medulloblastoma. Postoperatively, radiation therapy of the brain was carried out. Irradiated dose was 30 Gy on the whole brain and 20 Gy at the location of the lesion. She was discharged at the age of seven months. She remained in good condition with no neurological deficit except for nystagmus. One week later, it was found that she was unable to move her legs and she was readmitted to our hospital. CT scan showed no remarkable change in the intracranial region, but spinal cord swelling was revealed at the Th12-L5 level. Myelography showed a filling defect at the L3-5 level. Radiation therapy of the spinal cord was performed, and the paraparesis gradually improved. However, her general condition was getting worse, and the following CT scan showed intracranial recurrence of the tumor. She deteriorated day by day and at the age of 9.3 months she expired. Brain tumors during the neonatal period are very rare, especially neonatal medulloblastoma. Only 24 cases can be found in the literature.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of neonatal medulloblastoma]. 268 38

A case of malignant astrocytoma following radiotherapy for pituitary adenoma is presented in detail with a review of the literature. A 38 year-old housewife had developed a growth-hormone secreting pituitary adenoma, and received a total of 50 Gy at the pituitary region. Four years and six months later, she began suffering headache and vomiting. Computed tomography showed an extensive low density with ring enhancement in the right temporal region, corresponding to the previously irradiated field. A right frontotemporoparietal craniotomy was carried out, and a soft and reddish tumor was partially removed. The histological diagnosis was that of malignant astrocytoma. The patient was submitted to postoperative radiochemotherapy, receiving a total of 60 Gy, nimustine hydrochloride (ACNU), and tegafur (FT). Subsequently, after three months of clinical relief, she developed tumor regrowth, and died four months later. The present case fulfills the criteria for radiation-induced tumor established by Cahan et al.: A tumor location within irradiated area, no evidence of tumor prior to radiotherapy, a long latency period between radiation and tumor occurrence, and histological verification of the tumor. Thirty-nine cases of radiation-induced gliomas including the present case have been reported in the literature. It is noteworthy that the majority occur in the younger age bracket. Male preponderance is noted as it is in primary cerebral gliomas. The primary lesions for radiation frequently include leukemia and lymphoma. Craniopharyngioma, pituitary adenoma, and medulloblastoma etc are also included.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Malignant astrocytoma following radiotherapy in pituitary adenoma: case report]. 268 39

Brain tumors remain the second most common neoplasm of childhood, however, there is no adequate study of this disease in Thai children. From the year 1971 to 1987, 468 children under 15 years of age were admitted to the Department of Pediatrics, Ramathibodi hospital with the diagnosis of brain tumor. Four hundred and forty-four patients had primary intracranial tumors, of these, 17 were excluded due to inadequate information and the remaining 427 patients were studied. Male to female ratio was 1.3:1, the age ranged from one day old to 14 years old. The duration of illness before admission ranged from a few days to 4 years, with over 70 per cent within 3 months. Headache, vomiting and papilledema were the three most common symptoms and signs. Supratentorial and infratentoral tumors were seen in 209 and 216 patients respectively, craniopharyngioma was the most common supratentorial tumor (51/209) and medulloblastoma was the most common infratentorial tumor (95/216), however, malignant astrocytoma is the overall most common tumor type. Early diagnosis and treatment were needed for good outcome.
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PMID:Brain tumors in children at Ramathibodi Hospital. 273 28

Among 100 childhood brain tumors treated at Kobe Children's Hospital from May 1970 to June 1985, 18 of the children presented with symptoms during the first year of life. This paper analyzes these 18 cases. Supratentorial tumors (78%) were more common than infratentorial ones, and 67% of all the tumors were located in the central neural axis. Initial symptoms were cranial enlargement (56%), vomiting (17%), cranial deformity (11%), blepharoptosis, respiratory distress, and ataxia. Histological diagnosis of the tumors was as follows: teratoma (3 cases), medulloblastoma (3), glioblastoma (2), astrocytoma (2), ependymoma (2), craniopharyngioma (1), choroid plexus papilloma (1), hamartoma (1), lipoma (1), melanotic progonoma (1), and an undetermined type, probably medulloblastoma (1). Seventeen of the patients underwent craniotomy for tumor resection (4 total, 4 subtotal and 7 partial removal, and 2 biopsies). Additional therapeutic methods used separately and in various combinations included ventriculoperitoneal shunt, subduralperitoneal shunt, ventricular drainage, radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Nine patients died (average 98 days) after surgery. Of the 9 survivors, 6 are still alive after more than 5 years. Five of the 6 are mentally retarded and 4 are physically handicapped to some degree.
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PMID:Intracranial tumors in the first year of life. 377 67

Hemorrhage in medulloblastoma is reported to be extremely rare. This is an autopsy report documenting massive hemorrhage in medulloblastoma in an 11-year-old girl. She had a 3-week history of headache, vomiting and a tendency to fall to the left side, and suddenly developed respiratory arrest followed by coma. At autopsy, there were marked upward herniation of the anterior vermis and left cerebellar hemisphere and downward herniation of the cerebellar tonsils. Horizontal sections through the cerebellum showed a large tumor with a hematoma involving the entire vermis and left part of the cerebellar hemisphere. The histopathological diagnosis was medulloblastoma and no significant changes of tumor vessels were observed. Upward herniation played a significant role in the hemorrhage in this particular case. The presence of upward herniation was not described in the previously reported three autopsy cases of medulloblastoma with hemorrhage.
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PMID:[An autopsy case of medulloblastoma with massive hemorrhage]. 382 62

In a series of 144 central nervous system tumors found in adolescent patients, 133 occurred intracranially. Astrocytomas comprised 27 percent, glioblastoma multiforme 12 percent, medulloblastomas 11 percent and craniopharyngiomas 8 percent. The most common symptoms were headache and vomiting. Papilledema was the most frequent neurologic finding. Supratentorial and infratentorial lesions were nearly equal in occurrence. Rapidly growing tumors, such as medulloblastoma, were less frequent in these patients than in younger children.
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PMID:Tumors of the central nervous system in adolescents. 632 57

A 24-year-old female complained of headache and vomiting. The brain-CT scan demonstrated a tumor shadow in the right cerebellar hemisphere. The tumor was partially resected, and irradiation therapy was started. She died of intraventricular hemorrhage about 6 months after the onset of symptoms. Autopsy revealed a recurrent tumor mass in the cerebellum extending to the brain stem. It showed systemic metastases to the leptomeninx, liver, bones and ovaries. Histological examination showed a tumor which was a primarily composed of typical medulloblastoma cells with occasional Homer-Wright type rosettes. It partly showed glioblastoma-like configuration. Some tumor cells were positive for GFAP by the PAP method, suggesting glial differentiation.
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PMID:[Autopsy case of atypical medulloblastoma in an adult]. 666 12


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