2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejpn.2007.02.005
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A fourth ventricular ganglioneurocytoma representing with cerebellar epilepsy: A case report and review of the literature

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Cited by 21 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…These lesions produce paroxysmal and stereotyped attacks of hemifacial spasm and eye blinking associated with autonomic signs such as tachypnoea 2–9 . The onset of attacks usually occurs in the first days of life in otherwise healthy infants 3,5–7,9–17 . Intralesional electrical recordings and functional imaging studies have documented respectively, a hypersynchronous discharge and a hypermetabolism within the lesion and the brainstem nuclei, 3,5–7,9 which is congruent with the peculiar semiology of the paroxysmal attacks.…”
Section: Literature Review Of Published Reports Of Individuals With mentioning
confidence: 74%
“…These lesions produce paroxysmal and stereotyped attacks of hemifacial spasm and eye blinking associated with autonomic signs such as tachypnoea 2–9 . The onset of attacks usually occurs in the first days of life in otherwise healthy infants 3,5–7,9–17 . Intralesional electrical recordings and functional imaging studies have documented respectively, a hypersynchronous discharge and a hypermetabolism within the lesion and the brainstem nuclei, 3,5–7,9 which is congruent with the peculiar semiology of the paroxysmal attacks.…”
Section: Literature Review Of Published Reports Of Individuals With mentioning
confidence: 74%
“…Furthermore, gangliogliomas are among the most common epileptogenic lesions in epilepsy centers [21], harboring a major propensity for spontaneous electrical discharges which probably explains the association of this lesion to this unique syndrome [22]. Not unexpectedly, histological studies of cerebellar or fourth ventricle lesions presenting with subcortical epilepsy were classified as ganglioglioma [2,4,9,10,12,[23][24][25][26][27], hamartoma [8,13,14,28], gangliomatous hamartoma [29], ganglioneurocytoma [30][31][32] or low-grade dense fibrillary astrocytoma [3,15]. Although many of these lesions may carry a developmental origin and actually represent a continuum with FCD, some are not intrinsically epileptogenic [33].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…In order for this to occur, aberrant cerebello-pontine connections are required as normal cerebellar output is rubro-cortical or thalamo-cortical. Interestingly, there is only one other report of hemifacial seizures contralateral to a cerebellar lesion (Dagcinar et al, 2007), all others describe ictal semiology ipsilateral to the lesion which may be due to ephaptic propagation of ictal activity.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%