Publication | Open Access
Association of Morphological Characteristics with Precocious Puberty and/or Gelastic Seizures in Hypothalamic Hamartoma
74
Citations
31
References
2003
Year
UrologyClinical SymptomsMorphological CharacteristicsHealth SciencesNeuroanatomyCentral Precocious PubertyMedicineNeuroendocrine DisorderPediatricsGynecologyThird VentricleNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemEndocrinologyGelastic SeizuresPrecocious PubertyDisorders Of Sex DevelopmentReproductive Endocrinology
The pathogenesis of central precocious puberty (PP) and/or gelastic seizures due to a hypothalamic hamartoma (HH) is still under debate. We evaluated the association of clinical symptoms with morphology and localization of the HH in 34 patients. The majority (86.4%) of HHs in patients with isolated PP (n = 22; 68.2% females) revealed a parahypothalamic position without affecting the third ventricle (91%). Half of them were pedunculated, and 40.9% showed a diameter less than 10 mm. In contrast, 11 of 12 patients with seizures, eight of whom were male, presented with a sessile intrahypothalamic hamartoma, 10 of which distorted the third ventricle. Logistic regression analysis revealed an increased relative risk (RR) for epilepsy in males (RR, 4.3; 95% confidence interval, 0.96-19). However, combination of the risk factor gender with intrahypothalamic position (RR, 19; 1.3-285) and distortion of the third ventricle (RR, 10; 0.6-164) reduced the risk associated with male gender to 1.1. The position of a HH and involvement of the third ventricle are likely to be more predictive for clinical characteristics than size and shape. Male gender was associated with an intrahypothalamic HH and epilepsy, suggesting a sexually dimorphic developmental pattern of this heterotopic mass.
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