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Differential prefrontal-like deficit in children after cerebellar astrocytoma and medulloblastoma tumor

BACKGROUND: This study was realized thanks to the collaboration of children and adolescents who had been resected from cerebellar tumors. The medulloblastoma group (CE+, n = 7) in addition to surgery received radiation and chemotherapy. The astrocytoma group (CE, n = 13) did not receive additional t...

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Autores principales: Vaquero, Encarna, Gómez, Carlos M, Quintero, Eliana A, González-Rosa, Javier J, Márquez, Javier
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2362115/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18412947
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1744-9081-4-18
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author Vaquero, Encarna
Gómez, Carlos M
Quintero, Eliana A
González-Rosa, Javier J
Márquez, Javier
author_facet Vaquero, Encarna
Gómez, Carlos M
Quintero, Eliana A
González-Rosa, Javier J
Márquez, Javier
author_sort Vaquero, Encarna
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: This study was realized thanks to the collaboration of children and adolescents who had been resected from cerebellar tumors. The medulloblastoma group (CE+, n = 7) in addition to surgery received radiation and chemotherapy. The astrocytoma group (CE, n = 13) did not receive additional treatments. Each clinical group was compared in their executive functioning with a paired control group (n = 12). The performances of the clinical groups with respect to controls were compared considering the tumor's localization (vermis or hemisphere) and the affectation (or not) of the dentate nucleus. Executive variables were correlated with the age at surgery, the time between surgery-evaluation and the resected volume. METHODS: The executive functioning was assessed by means of WCST, Complex Rey Figure, Controlled Oral Word Association Test (letter and animal categories), Digits span (WISC-R verbal scale) and Stroop test. These tests are very sensitive to dorsolateral PFC and/or to medial frontal cortex functions. The scores for the non-verbal Raven IQ were also obtained. Direct scores were corrected by age and transformed in standard scores using normative data. The neuropsychological evaluation was made at 3.25 (SD = 2.74) years from surgery in CE group and at 6.47 (SD = 2.77) in CE+ group. RESULTS: The Medulloblastoma group showed severe executive deficit (≤ 1.5 SD below normal mean) in all assessed tests, the most severe occurring in vermal patients. The Astrocytoma group also showed executive deficits in digits span, semantic fluency (animal category) and moderate to slight deficit in Stroop (word and colour) tests. In the astrocytoma group, the tumor's localization and dentate affectation showed different profile and level of impairment: moderate to slight for vermal and hemispheric patients respectively. The resected volume, age at surgery and the time between surgery-evaluation correlated with some neuropsychological executive variables. CONCLUSION: Results suggest a differential prefrontal-like deficit due to cerebellar lesions and/or cerebellar-frontal diaschisis, as indicate the results in astrocytoma group (without treatments), that also can be generated and/or increased by treatments in the medulloblastoma group. The need for differential rehabilitation strategies for specific clinical groups is remarked. The results are also discussed in the context of the Cerebellar Cognitive Affective Syndrome.
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spelling pubmed-23621152008-04-30 Differential prefrontal-like deficit in children after cerebellar astrocytoma and medulloblastoma tumor Vaquero, Encarna Gómez, Carlos M Quintero, Eliana A González-Rosa, Javier J Márquez, Javier Behav Brain Funct Research BACKGROUND: This study was realized thanks to the collaboration of children and adolescents who had been resected from cerebellar tumors. The medulloblastoma group (CE+, n = 7) in addition to surgery received radiation and chemotherapy. The astrocytoma group (CE, n = 13) did not receive additional treatments. Each clinical group was compared in their executive functioning with a paired control group (n = 12). The performances of the clinical groups with respect to controls were compared considering the tumor's localization (vermis or hemisphere) and the affectation (or not) of the dentate nucleus. Executive variables were correlated with the age at surgery, the time between surgery-evaluation and the resected volume. METHODS: The executive functioning was assessed by means of WCST, Complex Rey Figure, Controlled Oral Word Association Test (letter and animal categories), Digits span (WISC-R verbal scale) and Stroop test. These tests are very sensitive to dorsolateral PFC and/or to medial frontal cortex functions. The scores for the non-verbal Raven IQ were also obtained. Direct scores were corrected by age and transformed in standard scores using normative data. The neuropsychological evaluation was made at 3.25 (SD = 2.74) years from surgery in CE group and at 6.47 (SD = 2.77) in CE+ group. RESULTS: The Medulloblastoma group showed severe executive deficit (≤ 1.5 SD below normal mean) in all assessed tests, the most severe occurring in vermal patients. The Astrocytoma group also showed executive deficits in digits span, semantic fluency (animal category) and moderate to slight deficit in Stroop (word and colour) tests. In the astrocytoma group, the tumor's localization and dentate affectation showed different profile and level of impairment: moderate to slight for vermal and hemispheric patients respectively. The resected volume, age at surgery and the time between surgery-evaluation correlated with some neuropsychological executive variables. CONCLUSION: Results suggest a differential prefrontal-like deficit due to cerebellar lesions and/or cerebellar-frontal diaschisis, as indicate the results in astrocytoma group (without treatments), that also can be generated and/or increased by treatments in the medulloblastoma group. The need for differential rehabilitation strategies for specific clinical groups is remarked. The results are also discussed in the context of the Cerebellar Cognitive Affective Syndrome. BioMed Central 2008-04-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2362115/ /pubmed/18412947 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1744-9081-4-18 Text en Copyright © 2008 Vaquero et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Vaquero, Encarna
Gómez, Carlos M
Quintero, Eliana A
González-Rosa, Javier J
Márquez, Javier
Differential prefrontal-like deficit in children after cerebellar astrocytoma and medulloblastoma tumor
title Differential prefrontal-like deficit in children after cerebellar astrocytoma and medulloblastoma tumor
title_full Differential prefrontal-like deficit in children after cerebellar astrocytoma and medulloblastoma tumor
title_fullStr Differential prefrontal-like deficit in children after cerebellar astrocytoma and medulloblastoma tumor
title_full_unstemmed Differential prefrontal-like deficit in children after cerebellar astrocytoma and medulloblastoma tumor
title_short Differential prefrontal-like deficit in children after cerebellar astrocytoma and medulloblastoma tumor
title_sort differential prefrontal-like deficit in children after cerebellar astrocytoma and medulloblastoma tumor
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2362115/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18412947
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1744-9081-4-18
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