Neurological evaluation of children and adolescents with brain tumor, based on ambulatory-oriented follow-up

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Abstract

Taken as proved that brain tumors are the second most frequent childhood neoplasm - only outnumbered by leukemias - we have undertaken a clinical perspective study with seventy brain tumor patients ranging from one to fifteen years of age, throughout a four-year period (1993-1997), based on ambulatory-oriented follow-up. Forty-one male and twenty-nine female patients were analyzed, in that a slightly higher number of infratentorial tumors was observed (thirty-eight cases), compared to those supratentorially located (thirty-two cases). The most repeatedly observed during the study was the medulloblastoma (twenty-one patients), followed by the astrocytoma (fifteen patients) and the germinoma (eleven patients). It should be pointed out that during the ambulatory follow-up 75,5% of patients developed neurological sequels. A tumor recurrence was noticed in 34,3% of them, while 21,4% eventually died.

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Serafim, A., Vilanova, L. C. P., & Silva, N. S. (2001). Neurological evaluation of children and adolescents with brain tumor, based on ambulatory-oriented follow-up. Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria, 59(4), 849–853. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0004-282X2001000600003

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