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[Natural
evolution of neurocutaneous syndrome in adults]
[Article in Spanish]
Pou Serradell A
Servicio de Neurologia, Hospital Universitario del Mar,
Barcelona
Neurofibromatoses (NF1 and
NF2) are genetic diseases with an extremely wide range of manifestations,
particularly NF1.
In order to gain insight into their prognosis, we have conducted a follow-up
study of 100 patients with neurofibromatoses, 89 NF1 patients and 11 NF2
patients, all of them presenting neurological manifestations.
Four deaths occurred in the NF1 group (3 neurofibrosarcomas) and two in the NF2
group (after neurosurgery).
We describe a series of NF1 brainstem tumors as being pilocytic astrocytomas,
much less aggressive than non-NF1 brainstem tumors but more symptomatic than
brainstem UBOs ('unidentified bright objects') in NF1.
The series of optic nerve tumors also demonstrate the poor and non-progressive
evolution of tumors with the same histopatological estructure.
Hydrocephalus related to aqueductal stenosis is a frequent and tratable
manifestation in NF1 patients.
Data are presented which suggest that a severe form of NF2 is much more frequent
than a mild form but it is rule that number and progressivity of tumors render
the prognosis always severe in NF2 patients.
A long term follow-up study has been carried among 20 patients with tuberous
sclerosis: patients who presented seizures before the age of 5 years have mental
retardation in spite of disappearing, often spontaneously, the seizures.
The initial symptoms in Von Hippel-Lindau patients depend often on the
hemangioblastoma of the spinal cord and a strict control is proposed for
patients with risk of suffering spinal-cerebello-retino
hemangioblastomatosis.
Other phakomatoses are also being considered in their general prognosis.
PMID:
8755348 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=8755348&dopt=Abstract
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