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Published in: Child's Nervous System 3/2006

01-03-2006 | Case Report

Sudden death in children due to intracranial mass lesion

Authors: Essam A. Elgamal, Peter G. Richards

Published in: Child's Nervous System | Issue 3/2006

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Abstract

Study objective

Intracranial causes of sudden and unexpected death in children are uncommon and are usually due to trauma, epilepsy or to catastrophic haemorrhage associated with neoplasms or vascular malformations. We sought to review the presenting symptoms and signs of intracranial mass lesions that led to sudden death to guide clinicians in early identification of these potentially treatable conditions.

Methods

All cases of sudden unexpected death attributed to intracranial mass lesion that occurred from 1996 to 2002 at the Oxford Radcliffe Hospitals, NHS Trust, were reviewed.

Results

During the study period, six children, aged between 10 weeks and 12 years, died suddenly with intracranial mass lesions other than haematomas. All of them were unsuspected of having a neurological disease prior to death. All patients were found to have an intracranial mass lesion. There were colloid cyst (n=2), glioblastoma multiform (n=1), primitive neuro-ectodermal tumour (n=1), pyogenic abscess (n=1) and histologically unverified tumour (n=1). Presenting features included headache and vomiting in four cases, vomiting longer than 1 week in three and lethargy in four cases. Three patients were misdiagnosed with viral illness.

Conclusion

The case series highlights a life-threatening but misleading presentation of intracranial mass lesions. The diagnosis of viral illness should be made cautiously when headache and vomiting occur in the absence of focal complaints. A history of vomiting exceeding a few days duration warrants further investigation. Persistent lethargy should be considered a neurological rather than a non-specific clinical sign.
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Metadata
Title
Sudden death in children due to intracranial mass lesion
Authors
Essam A. Elgamal
Peter G. Richards
Publication date
01-03-2006
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Child's Nervous System / Issue 3/2006
Print ISSN: 0256-7040
Electronic ISSN: 1433-0350
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00381-005-1215-4

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