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Query: UMLS:C0264733 (
ventricular dilatation
)
2,163
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To determine the frequency and nature of MRI lesions in children with
neurofibromatosis
type I (NF1), 50 patients aged 8 to 16 years were evaluated prospectively with cranial MRI. Forty-one children were asymptomatic with respect to central nervous system pathology, and 50% were macrocephalic. Sixteen patients (32%) had normal MRI examinations. Thirty-two patients (64%) had high intensity lesions on T2-weighted images and 16 patients (32%) had hyperintense lesions on T1-weighted images. Seven patients (14%) had
ventricular dilatation
(associated with increased intracranial pressure in 2) and 11 patients (22%) had optic pathway lesions (optic glioma in 7). MRI was superior to CT in differentiating optic sheath thickening and optic nerve tortuosity from optic glioma in four patients. An intracranial tumour (ependymoma) and sphenoid wing dysplasia were evident in individual patients. Findings previously unreported in NF1 included an aqueductal web resulting in hydrocephalus, intraocular neurofibroma resulting in retinal detachment, and asymptomatic enlargement of the septum pellucidum. T1 and T2 signal abnormalities in isolation were not associated with neurological deficits or the occurrence of macrocephaly, and all lesions that required intervention were suspected clinically. Macrocephaly in the absence of increased intracranial pressure or accelerated head growth is not an indication for neuroimaging in children with NF1. However, the majority of children (68%) had disease-specific abnormalities and thus MRI may provide a useful adjunct to clinical evaluation in the diagnosis of equivocal cases.
...
PMID:MRI findings in children with neurofibromatosis type 1: a prospective study. 866 66
The authors evaluated the impact of hydrocephalus on the clinical picture of children with visual pathway tumor (VPT) with or without
neurofibromatosis
(NF). Charts of children with VPT treated in the authors' center since 1985 were retrospectively reviewed, and those with hydrocephalus were selected and summarized. Thirty-five children with VPT were found, of whom 20 had NF. Hydrocephalus was found in 4 children with NF (20%) and in 5 without NF (33.3%). In 6 of the children,
ventricular dilatation
with signs of acute increased intracranial pressure already existed at the time of diagnosis and the hydrocephalus was shunted at this time. In the other 3 children, all with NF, the hydrocephalus resulted from slowly developing aqueductal stenosis, leading in 2 to severe visual acuity deterioration. The results suggest that in children with VPT and NF, hydrocephalus, and especially hydrocephalus resulting from aqueductal stenosis, is more frequent than in the general population of NF patients, and less frequent than in VPT patients without NF. The possibility of the indolent development of hydrocephalus should be borne in mind while following children with NF. The optic nerve, when already involved with a glioma, is more vulnerable to increased pressure. Thus, in children with VPT and NF, any
ventricular dilatation
should lead to a consideration of early shunting.
...
PMID:Visual pathway tumors and hydrocephalus. 1098 66