#PAGE_PARAMS# #ADS_HEAD_SCRIPTS# #MICRODATA#

Hemimegalencephalia. An overview of relevant literature and experience in surgical treatment of 5 affected children


Authors: H. Homolková 1;  M. Häckel 2;  M. Prchlík 1;  V. Beneš 2
Authors‘ workplace: Klinika dětské chirurgie a traumatologie 3. LF UK a FTN Praha 1;  Neurochirurgická klinika 1. LF UK a ÚVN Praha a IPVZ 2
Published in: Cesk Slov Neurol N 2007; 70/103(5): 538-543
Category: Short Communication

Overview

Hemimegalencephalia is a dysplasia deforming the cerebral cortex and causing asymmetry of the cerebral hemispheres. The dominating feature of an MR image is the abnormal size of one of the hemispheres, ventriculomegaly and abnormality of gyrification. The disease can exist in isolation or in connection with other lesions forming part of a neurocutaneous disease. The three-grade classification (I–III) reflects the severity of affection and prognosis. The disease is manifested as early as in childhood, mostly in the form of refractory epileptic seizures and other psychological and neurological symptoms. If conservative treatment fails, surgical removal of the affected area is the method of choice: lobar/multilobar resection (A), subpial transsection in the motor area (B), decortication (C), and functional or anatomic hemispherectomy (fHSE or aHSE, respectively). The authors report the course and results of surgical treatment of five children with the hemimegalencephalia diagnosis. The clinical picture of all the five children was dominated by refractory epileptic seizures, psycho-motor development disorder and additional neurologic symptoms: contralateral hemiparesis, myoclonal jerks etc. Surgery was performed in all the patients: calosotomy and functional hemispherectomy extended in the second time, subpial transsection of the motor area with multilobar resection, subpial transsection of the motor area with lobar resection and decortication, anatomic hemispherectomy, functional hemispherectomy in the second time complemented with anatomic hemispherectomy. In all cases, the treatment resulted in lower frequency of EP seizures, and the progress of PM slightly decelerated in three patients, while the surgery had no effect in another two patients with stagnating PM development. Thirty-day morbidity and mortality in the set was nil. The authors refer to hemimegalencephalia as a relatively rare neurosurgical disease. They point out that also the relatively invasive surgery which is only sporadically used today, has its place in the treatment of hemimegalencephalia.

Key words:
cerebral cortex dysplasia – hemimegalencephalia – refractory epilepsy – hemispherectomy


Sources

1. Walsh CA. Genetics of neuronal migration in the cerebral cortex. MRDD Res Rev 2000; 6: 34–40.

2. Marin O, Rubenstein JLR. A long remarkable journey: tangential migration in the telencephalon. Nature Rev 2001; 2: 780–790.

3. Xu Q, Cobos I, De La Cruz E, Rubenstein JLR, Anderson SA. Origins of cortical interneuron subtypes. J Neurosci 2004; 24: 2612–2622.

4. Barkovich AJ, Raybaud CA. Neuroimaging in disorders of cortical development. Neuroimaging Clin N Am 2004; 14(2): 231–254.

5. Barkovich AJ, Kuzniecky RI, Jackson GD, Guerrini R, Dobyns WB. Classification system for malformations of cortical development: Update 2001. Neurology 2001; 57: 2168–2178.

6. Sarnat HB. Cerebral dysgenesis. New York: Oxford University Press 1992.

7. Sims J. On hypertrophy and atrophy of the brain. Med Quir Trans 1835; 19:315-318.

8. Trounce JQ, Rutter N, Mellor DH. Hemimegalencephaly: Diagnosis and treatment. Dev Med Child Neurol 1991; 33: 261-266.

9. Takashima S, Chan F, Becker LE, Kuruta H. Aberrant neuronal development in hemimegalencephaly: Imunohistochemical and Golgi studies. Pediatr Neurol 1991; 7: 275-280.

10. Woo CL, Chuang SH, Becker LE, Jay V, Otrubo H, Rutka ST et al. Radiologic- pathologic correlation in focal cortical dysplazia and hemimegalencephaly in 18 children. Pediatr Neurol 2001; 25: 259-303.

11. Townsend JJ, Nielsen SL, Malamud N. Unilateral megalencephaly : Hamartoma or neoplasm? Neurology 1975; 25: 448-453.

12. Saijoh Y, Adachi H, Mochida K, Ohishi S, Hirao A, Hamada H et al. Distinct transcriptional regulatory mechanism underlie left-right asymetric expression of lefty 1 and lefty 2. Genes Dev 1999; 13: 259-269.

13. Battaglia D, Di Rocco C, Iuvone L, Acquafondata C, Ianelli A, Lettori D et al. Neuro- cognitive development and epilepsy in children with surgically treated hemimegalencephaly. Neuropediatrics 1999; 30: 307-313.

14. Thong MK, Thompson E, Keenan R, Sommer K, Harbord M, Davidson G et al. A child with hemimegalencephaly, hemihypertrophy, macrocephaly, cutaneous vascular malformation, psychomotor retardation and intestinal lymphangiectasia – A diagnostic dilemma. Clin Dysmorphol 1999; 8: 283-286.

15. Flores-Sarnat L. Hemi-megalencephaly (Part 1): Genetic, clinical and imaging aspects. J Child Neuro 2002; 17: 373-374.

16. Ohtsuka Y, Ohno S, Oka E. Electroclinical characteristics of hemimegalencephaly. Pediatr Neurol 1999; 20: 390-393.

17. Reardon W, Harding B, Winter B, Baraitzer M. Hemihypertrophy, hemimegalencephaly, and polydactyly. Am J Med Genet 1996; 66: 144-146.

18. Cho W, Seidenwurm D, Barkovich AJ. Adult onset of neurologic dysfunctionassociated with cortical malformations. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 1999; 20: 1037–1043.

19. Flores-Sarnat L, Sarnat HB, Gutierez GD, Alvarez A. Hemimegalencephaly: Part 2.Neuropathology Suggest a Disorder of Cellular Lineage . J Child Neurol 2003; 18: 776-785.

20. Yasha TC, Santosh V, Das S, Shankar SK. Hemimegalencephaly: Morphological and immunohistochemical study. Clin Neuropathol 1997; 16: 17-22.

21. Fitz CR, Harwood-Nash DC, Boldt DW. The radiographic features of unilateral megalencephaly. Neuroradiology 1978; 15: 145-148.

22. Di Rocco C, Iannelli A. Hemimegalencephaly and intractable epilepsy: complication of hemispherectomy and their correlations with surgical technique. A report on 15 cases. Pediatr Neurosurg 2000; 33(4): 198-207.

23. Zentner J. Surgical treatment of epilepsies. Acta Neurochir Suppl 2002; 84: 27-35.

24. Carreno M, Wyllie E, Bingaman W, Kotagal P, Comair Y, Ruggieri P. Seizure outcome after functional hemispherectomy for malformations of cortical development. Neurology 2001; 57(2): 331-333.

Labels
Paediatric neurology Neurosurgery Neurology

Article was published in

Czech and Slovak Neurology and Neurosurgery

Issue 5

2007 Issue 5

Most read in this issue
Topics Journals
Login
Forgotten password

Enter the email address that you registered with. We will send you instructions on how to set a new password.

Login

Don‘t have an account?  Create new account

#ADS_BOTTOM_SCRIPTS#