Surgical outcome of posterior fossa tumours: a Benha experience

Abstract Background Posterior fossa brain tumours are one of the most devastating forms of human illnesses which are more common in children. Brainstem compression, herniation and death are the risks with tumours in this critical location. Objective To evaluate our results, complications and outcome...

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Main Authors: Mohamed Emara, Abd-Elaal Mamdouh, Mohamed M. Elmaghrabi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-07-01
Series:Egyptian Journal of Neurosurgery
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41984-020-00083-w
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spelling doaj-df25c83a4b404341ad95cbfcce4d47e02020-11-25T03:01:03ZengSpringerOpenEgyptian Journal of Neurosurgery2520-82252020-07-013511710.1186/s41984-020-00083-wSurgical outcome of posterior fossa tumours: a Benha experienceMohamed Emara0Abd-Elaal Mamdouh1Mohamed M. Elmaghrabi2Department of Neurosurgery, Benha UniversityDepartment of Neurosurgery, Benha UniversityDepartment of Neurosurgery, Benha UniversityAbstract Background Posterior fossa brain tumours are one of the most devastating forms of human illnesses which are more common in children. Brainstem compression, herniation and death are the risks with tumours in this critical location. Objective To evaluate our results, complications and outcome of posterior fossa tumour surgery in Benha University Hospital. Patients and methods A prospective study including 44 patients with posterior fossa tumours were performed at the Neurosurgery Department in Benha University Hospital between the period of March 2015 and October 2018. In each case, diagnosis was made clinically and confirmed radiologically and histo-pathologically. Results Out of 44 patients, 28 (63.6%) patients were males and 16 (36.4%) were females. The mean age was 17.5 + 14.2 years (ranged 2–30 years). This study showed that excellent surgical outcome was observed in 12 cases (27.3%), good in 22 cases (50%) while poor outcome was observed in 10 cases (22.7%). The best outcome is astrocytoma then ependymoma while the worst outcome is metastatic then medulloblastoma which is statistically insignificant. Conclusion The surgical treatment of posterior fossa tumours still represents a challenge for neurosurgeons. Our Benha experience shows the accepted results, complications and surgical outcome in relation to previous clinical studies. Trial registration IRB#3747. Registered 18 September 2018.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41984-020-00083-wOpen posterior fossaSurgical outcomeTumours
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohamed Emara
Abd-Elaal Mamdouh
Mohamed M. Elmaghrabi
spellingShingle Mohamed Emara
Abd-Elaal Mamdouh
Mohamed M. Elmaghrabi
Surgical outcome of posterior fossa tumours: a Benha experience
Egyptian Journal of Neurosurgery
Open posterior fossa
Surgical outcome
Tumours
author_facet Mohamed Emara
Abd-Elaal Mamdouh
Mohamed M. Elmaghrabi
author_sort Mohamed Emara
title Surgical outcome of posterior fossa tumours: a Benha experience
title_short Surgical outcome of posterior fossa tumours: a Benha experience
title_full Surgical outcome of posterior fossa tumours: a Benha experience
title_fullStr Surgical outcome of posterior fossa tumours: a Benha experience
title_full_unstemmed Surgical outcome of posterior fossa tumours: a Benha experience
title_sort surgical outcome of posterior fossa tumours: a benha experience
publisher SpringerOpen
series Egyptian Journal of Neurosurgery
issn 2520-8225
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background Posterior fossa brain tumours are one of the most devastating forms of human illnesses which are more common in children. Brainstem compression, herniation and death are the risks with tumours in this critical location. Objective To evaluate our results, complications and outcome of posterior fossa tumour surgery in Benha University Hospital. Patients and methods A prospective study including 44 patients with posterior fossa tumours were performed at the Neurosurgery Department in Benha University Hospital between the period of March 2015 and October 2018. In each case, diagnosis was made clinically and confirmed radiologically and histo-pathologically. Results Out of 44 patients, 28 (63.6%) patients were males and 16 (36.4%) were females. The mean age was 17.5 + 14.2 years (ranged 2–30 years). This study showed that excellent surgical outcome was observed in 12 cases (27.3%), good in 22 cases (50%) while poor outcome was observed in 10 cases (22.7%). The best outcome is astrocytoma then ependymoma while the worst outcome is metastatic then medulloblastoma which is statistically insignificant. Conclusion The surgical treatment of posterior fossa tumours still represents a challenge for neurosurgeons. Our Benha experience shows the accepted results, complications and surgical outcome in relation to previous clinical studies. Trial registration IRB#3747. Registered 18 September 2018.
topic Open posterior fossa
Surgical outcome
Tumours
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41984-020-00083-w
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