All patients with confirmed intracranial germ-cell tumors treated at the Hospital of Sick Children during the period January, 1952, to December, 1989, were reviewed. Of the 51 tumors reviewed, 16 were located in the suprasellar region, 32 in the pineal region, and three in both the pineal and the suprasellar regions. Forty-nine patients underwent surgical resection which was total in seven and partial in 20, and consisted of a biopsy in 22. Two patients were managed on the basis of serum and cerebrospinal fluid markers. Surgical tools such as the operating microscope, the ultrasonic surgical aspirator, and the laser beam allowed safe debulking and removal of the deep-seated tumors in the pineal region. There were no operative deaths in the 36 patients treated since 1972, who included 23 with pineal tumors. Twenty-five patients with germinomas received radiotherapy and had a 5-year survival rate of 85.1%. Thirteen patients with non-germinoma germ-cell tumors received radiotherapy and had a 5-year survival rate of 45.5%. On the basis of this review, the authors recommend resection of pineal and suprasellar germ-cell tumors in order to firmly establish an accurate histological diagnosis to guide the extent of adjuvant therapy. In the case of a pure germinoma without evidence of dissemination, adjuvant therapy consists only of local radiotherapy. On the other hand, for malignant non-germinoma germ-cell tumors, adjuvant therapy must include chemotherapy as well as craniospinal axis radiotherapy.
Cerebrospinal fluid shunt failure remains a common and at times overwhelming problem in pediatric patients with hydrocephalus. Two new shunt valve designs, the Orbis-Sigma (Cordis Corporation, Miami, Florida) and the Delta valve (PS Medical, Goletta, California), have flow/pressure characteristics dramatically different from those of standard differential pressure valves which have been used for over three decades. Both new designs reduce the siphoning effect in the upright position, and have been reported to reduce shunt failure rates in uncontrolled series, allegedly due to reduction in shunt overdrainage. Most mechanical shunt failure in the first 2 years after implantation is due to proximal shunt obstruction, overdrainage, and loculated ventricles. By reducing the incidence of slit ventricles associated with standard valves, both new designs could be envisioned as reducing the early mechanical complications. The improved results with both new valves could, however, also be to a large extent due to other confounding effects of shunt surgery, including patient selection, surgical technique, and specific configuration of the components of the shunt other than the valve. There are also theoretical reasons why these valve designs might be worse than their predecessors, including the narrow orifice and high resistance of the Orbis-Sigma, and the flexible membrane of the siphon control portion of the Delta valve, which may increase the ventricular pressure in the upright position or become blocked by encasing scar tissue. For this reason a randomized trial is required to determine efficacy, and a standard differential pressure valve is required as the control design. A significant reduction in early shunt failure would dramatically improve the morbidity and mortality of pediatric hydrocephalic patients, as well as providing substantial savings to the health care system. Failure to determine any difference would focus attention on other issues surrounding shunt surgery, such as patient characteristics or surgical technique.
Fibrous dysplasia is an abnormal fibroosseous process of bone of unknown cause. The Incidence of skull involvement varies, painless enlargement being the most common presenting symptom. Change in vision is a rare but recognized finding. We report a 3-year-old boy with extreme fibrous dysplasia involving the skull base, who presented with blindness. He underwent exposure osteotomies of the frontal bones and orbits to provide access for skull base tumor removal. The orbital roofs were reconstructed with microplate-fixed cranial grafts. One and one half years after tumor excision followed by immediate reconstruction, the boy retains facial symmetry, and his ocular function has not deteriorated.
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