Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Diagnosis, Background, and Treatment of Hypothalamic Damage in Craniopharyngioma

Erfurth, Eva Marie LU (2020) In Neuroendocrinology 110(9-10). p.767-779
Abstract

Craniopharyngiomas (CP) are rare brain tumors managed primarily with surgery and radiotherapy. There are 2 phenotypes of CP, i.e., one with a rather good outcome without hypothalamic damage and another with hypothalamic damage. With hypothalamic damage, progressive disease with recurrent operations and additional cranial radiotherapy often result in hypothalamic obesity, an affected psychosocial life, and cognitive dysfunction. The morbidity and mortality are increased for particularly cerebrovascular diseases. Preoperative hypothalamic involvement to predict hypothalamic damage is important for decision making for hypothalamus-sparing surgery. Also a postoperative hypothalamic damage evaluation with the use of hypothalamus volume... (More)

Craniopharyngiomas (CP) are rare brain tumors managed primarily with surgery and radiotherapy. There are 2 phenotypes of CP, i.e., one with a rather good outcome without hypothalamic damage and another with hypothalamic damage. With hypothalamic damage, progressive disease with recurrent operations and additional cranial radiotherapy often result in hypothalamic obesity, an affected psychosocial life, and cognitive dysfunction. The morbidity and mortality are increased for particularly cerebrovascular diseases. Preoperative hypothalamic involvement to predict hypothalamic damage is important for decision making for hypothalamus-sparing surgery. Also a postoperative hypothalamic damage evaluation with the use of hypothalamus volume measurement can predict hypothalamic obesity, which is important for early treatment options. The morbidity of CP includes cognitive dysfunction with attention deficits and impaired episodic memory and processing speed. Again patients with hypothalamic damage are more affected. Treatment options of hypothalamic obesity in the chronic phase are scarce and not convincingly successful. The most optimal situation is to try to hinder or stop the evolution of hypothalamic obesity. Prevention of hypothalamic damage is recommended, with special regard to hypothalamus-sparing therapeutic approaches that respect the integrity of essential nuclei located in both the medial and the posterior hypothalamic areas.

(Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Craniopharyngioma, Hypothalamic obesity, Hypothalamus, Neurosurgery
in
Neuroendocrinology
volume
110
issue
9-10
pages
767 - 779
publisher
Karger
external identifiers
  • scopus:85090079785
  • pmid:32580186
ISSN
0028-3835
DOI
10.1159/000509616
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
8e7cd249-0a65-4d30-a22b-20ce8db5842e
date added to LUP
2020-09-25 12:16:11
date last changed
2024-04-03 14:06:35
@article{8e7cd249-0a65-4d30-a22b-20ce8db5842e,
  abstract     = {{<p>Craniopharyngiomas (CP) are rare brain tumors managed primarily with surgery and radiotherapy. There are 2 phenotypes of CP, i.e., one with a rather good outcome without hypothalamic damage and another with hypothalamic damage. With hypothalamic damage, progressive disease with recurrent operations and additional cranial radiotherapy often result in hypothalamic obesity, an affected psychosocial life, and cognitive dysfunction. The morbidity and mortality are increased for particularly cerebrovascular diseases. Preoperative hypothalamic involvement to predict hypothalamic damage is important for decision making for hypothalamus-sparing surgery. Also a postoperative hypothalamic damage evaluation with the use of hypothalamus volume measurement can predict hypothalamic obesity, which is important for early treatment options. The morbidity of CP includes cognitive dysfunction with attention deficits and impaired episodic memory and processing speed. Again patients with hypothalamic damage are more affected. Treatment options of hypothalamic obesity in the chronic phase are scarce and not convincingly successful. The most optimal situation is to try to hinder or stop the evolution of hypothalamic obesity. Prevention of hypothalamic damage is recommended, with special regard to hypothalamus-sparing therapeutic approaches that respect the integrity of essential nuclei located in both the medial and the posterior hypothalamic areas.</p>}},
  author       = {{Erfurth, Eva Marie}},
  issn         = {{0028-3835}},
  keywords     = {{Craniopharyngioma; Hypothalamic obesity; Hypothalamus; Neurosurgery}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{01}},
  number       = {{9-10}},
  pages        = {{767--779}},
  publisher    = {{Karger}},
  series       = {{Neuroendocrinology}},
  title        = {{Diagnosis, Background, and Treatment of Hypothalamic Damage in Craniopharyngioma}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000509616}},
  doi          = {{10.1159/000509616}},
  volume       = {{110}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}