1/4. Diencephalic syndrome of emaciation in an adult associated with a third ventricle intrinsic craniopharyngioma: case report.OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: Diencephalic syndrome of emaciation (DS) is seen almost exclusively in infants and young children, and only two cases of DS in adults have been reported previously. We describe a case of DS associated with a third ventricle intrinsic craniopharyngioma in an adult patient. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 54-year-old man presented with profound emaciation, disorientation, memory loss, and psychological disorders. Computed tomographic scanning and magnetic resonance imaging of his brain disclosed a tumor within the third ventricle. The preoperative endocrinological examination indicated an elevated growth hormone level and a decreased somatomedin C level. INTERVENTION: The patient underwent partial resection of the tumor, which was adherent to the floor of the third ventricle but not to the ventricle wall, by an interhemispheric-transcallosal approach. The histological examination revealed a squamous papillary-type craniopharyngioma. The patient received 50 Gy of radiotherapy, which resulted in 90 to 95% reduction of the tumor size within 6 months, as indicated by the magnetic resonance images presented. The psychological disorders, memory disturbance, and severe emaciation improved gradually thereafter. CONCLUSION: Although extremely rare, DS can occur in an adult harboring a tumor in the anterior hypothalamus.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = emaciation (Clic here for more details about this article) |
2/4. Diencephalic syndrome due to hypothalamic tumor: a model of the relationship between weight and puberty onset.CONTEXT: Changes in body weight, statural growth rate, and puberty may be the presenting symptoms of hypothalamic-pituitary tumors. OBJECTIVE: The objective of the study was to assess the relationship between the tumor and its treatment and the weight, growth rate, and onset of puberty, using the diencephalic syndrome of emaciation as model. patients: Eleven patients seen before 1 yr of age, except one aged 9 yr, for diencephalic syndrome of emaciation due to hypothalamic pilocytic astrocytoma, were treated by surgical resection (n = 9), cranial irradiation (n = 7), and/or chemotherapy (n = 10). RESULTS: At diagnosis, growth rate was normal, despite the emaciation, and there was no hypothalamic-pituitary deficiency, except in the oldest patient. After tumor treatment, all had GH and thyroid-stimulating hormone deficiencies, but only three, who underwent major surgical resection, also had ACTH deficiency and diabetes insipidus. Eight became obese, and all but the oldest had transient precocious puberty. plasma leptin concentrations were very low at diagnosis, increased after tumor treatment, and decreased transiently in one boy when the testosterone increased. The plasma soluble leptin receptor concentrations changed in the opposite direction, leading to an increase in the free leptin index, including in the three patients whose tumor was reduced without surgery. The body mass index was correlated positively with plasma leptin (rho = 0.73, P = 0.0004) and free leptin index (rho = 0.63, P < 0.004) and negatively with ghrelin (rho = -0.49, P < 0.03) concentrations. CONCLUSIONS: The obesity that occurs after treatment of hypothalamic tumors is not due to dysregulation of leptin secretion because it and plasma soluble leptin receptor remain regulated by factors like testosterone. This study also shows the influence of weight, possibly via leptin secretion, on the transient hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal activation that occurs during the first year of life.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 0.42857142857143keywords = emaciation (Clic here for more details about this article) |
3/4. Surgical syndromes of the hypothalamus.The clinical syndromes described with lesions of the hypothalamus are summarized in Table 9.5-9.7. The anterior hypothalamic syndrome consists of insomnia and loss of thirst regulatory mechanisms. In occasional larger lesions which interrupt the output from the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei, diabetes insipidus has been noticed. In the tuberal region of the hypothalamus the most prominent findings are those that are caused by the disruption of the final common pathway to the pituitary. This results in endocrinopathy, most often the syndrome originally reported by Frohlich, with failure of sexual maturation and obesity. In the tuberal region, differences between lesions of the medial and lateral portions are quite marked. Medial lesions result in obesity while bilateral lesions result in anorexia and emaciation. The diencephalic syndrome of infancy with it's severe emaciation in young years and obesity in later years clearly indicates a different organizational pattern in the neonatal hypothalamus. Emotional disorders may be seen with lesions either in the medial or lateral hypothalamus at the tuberal level. Finally, in the posterior hypothalamic region, which includes the greatest effector apparatus, hypersomnia, apathy, and poikilothermia have been reported. Emotional disturbances and the Wernicke-korsakoff syndrome also seemed to be associated with lesions in this area. The hypothalamus remains the single most important integrator of vegetative and endocrinologic regulation of the body. Cushing said of the hypothalamus, "here in this hidden spot, almost to be covered with a thumb nail, lies the very main spring of primitive existence: vegetative, emotional and reproductive".- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 0.28571428571429keywords = emaciation (Clic here for more details about this article) |
4/4. Diencephalic syndrome and disseminated juvenile pilocytic astrocytomas of the hypothalamic-optic chiasm region.BACKGROUND: Diencephalic syndrome (DS) is a complex of signs and symptoms related to hypothalamic dysfunction; its main features are emaciation, despite a normal or slightly diminished caloric intake, and an alert appearance. DS has been almost exclusively described in association with space-occupying lesions of the hypothalamic-optic chiasm region, mainly juvenile pilocytic astrocytoma (JPA). A systematic diagnostic approach, including contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the child's head, is rapidly expanding our knowledge of this syndrome. methods: The MRI findings for three children affected by DS associated with biopsy-proven JPA, consecutively referred to the Pediatric Neuro-Oncology Program of the Department of pediatrics at the University of Padua between September 1991 and January 1996, are presented in this article. The children were boys, ages 6, 7, and 18 months, respectively. RESULTS: In all three patients, the initial contrast-enhancing MRIs of the head showed evidence of tumor dissemination. This finding prompted a study of the spine, which in turn showed tumor deposits in all three subjects. Among the 43 patients younger than 16 years with low grade astroctyoma who consecutively entered the Neuro-Oncology Program during the study period, these 3 patients were the only ones who had disseminated tumors. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, the hypothesis was formulated that DS and disseminated hypothalamic-optic chiasm JPA tend to be more commonly associated than previously stated. This study suggests that the initial contrast-enhanced MRI of the head of a child affected by DS and hypothalamic JPA must be looked at carefully for evidence of tumor dissemination, and that the spine must also be examined if the findings are positive.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 0.14285714285714keywords = emaciation (Clic here for more details about this article) |