Clinical variety and prognosis of intracranial arachnoid cysts in children

Arachnoid cysts (AC) occur in different intracranial locations. Management and prognosis depend on the clinical presentation and treatment guidelines do not exist. With this study, we want to demonstrate the clinical variety of arachnoid cysts in children and place a focus on outcome factors in oper...

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Published inNeurosurgical review Vol. 45; no. 5; pp. 3171 - 3178
Main Authors Jünger, Stephanie T., Knerlich-Lukoschus, Friederike, Röhrig, Andreas, Al Hourani, Jasmin, Kunze, Sandra, Eberle, Julia, Oelkers, Peter, Messing-Jünger, Martina
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Berlin/Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg 01.10.2022
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Summary:Arachnoid cysts (AC) occur in different intracranial locations. Management and prognosis depend on the clinical presentation and treatment guidelines do not exist. With this study, we want to demonstrate the clinical variety of arachnoid cysts in children and place a focus on outcome factors in operated cases. This retrospective study of a consecutive single unit series of children, who underwent AC surgery between January 2010 and September 2019, provides demographic, clinical, imaging data, and information about surgical treatment and outcome. Overall, 63 patients (71.4 male) underwent surgery. Mean age was 50 months (0–191). Mean follow-up was 40 months (0–121). Eighty-one percent of patients presented with symptoms/signs of raised ICP. Focal neurological deficits were present in 15.9%, headache in 11.1% of children. Galassi cysts represented the predominant type (30.2%), followed by suprasellar (14.3%), quadrigeminal (12.7%), retrocerebellar, CPA and midline (each 11.1%), and hemispheric cysts (7.9%). Endoscopic and microsurgical fenestrations were performed in 27% and 58.7%, stent or shunt insertion in 6.3%/57.9% of the cases. In 33.3% of the cases one and in 12.7%, a second reintervention became necessary. Reoperation rate was significantly higher in children < 1 year ( p  = 0.003). Cyst volume decreased in 85.7%. Seventy percent of the patients were symptom free, 5% suffered from headache, and 22% from developmental disorders. All focal neurological symptoms resolved. Complication rate and outcome are depending on age and cyst location. Recurrence and revision rates are significantly higher in young infants ( p  = 0.003). Midline cysts with CCA are associated with developmental disorders.
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ISSN:1437-2320
1437-2320
DOI:10.1007/s10143-022-01809-0