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a Department of
Neonatal Medicine, Birmingham Women's Hospital, Edgbaston, Birmingham,
UK, b Department of Pathology
Correspondence to: Dr Morgan, Neonatal Unit, Birmingham Women's Hospital, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TG, UK BRPal{at}fsmail.net
Accepted 8 June 2001
BACKGROUND
Screening
cranial ultrasound led to the discovery of isolated frontal horn cysts
quite distinct from periventricular leucomalacia cysts.
AIM
To clarify their
significance, incidence, characteristics, causal factors or aetiology,
and effect on long term outcome.
DESIGN
A retrospective
observational study of all first cranial ultrasound scans (total of
2914) performed during the period 1984-1994 inclusive found 21 neonates with smooth thin walled frontal horn cysts: 18 of 2629 scanned were of birth weight < 1500 g or gestation < 33 weeks, and
three of 285 were > 33 weeks gestation. Sequential ultrasound,
maternal records, and neonatal events were retrospectively assessed. In survivors, routine neurodevelopmental evaluations were
obtained. Postmortem studies of one cyst were performed to determine
the nature and origin of these lesions.
RESULTS
Of the
21 subjects, 15 had isolated frontal horn cysts and six had additional
ultrasound scan abnormalities, including four with subependymal
haemorrhage. The sonographic features of frontal horn cysts were of
distinctive morphology (elliptical, smooth, thin walled, ranging in
size from 3 to 20 mm) and position (adjacent to the tip of the anterior
horns). The cysts enlarged and then regressed by a median corrected age
of 2 months. Subjects of < 33 weeks gestation (n = 18) had a median
birth weight of 1465 g (range 720-1990) and median gestation of 30 weeks (range 24-32). There was no consistent perinatal course. The
neurodevelopmental outcome in 10 of the 11 survivors with isolated
frontal horn cysts was normal. Five subjects died from causes unrelated
to brain pathology in the neonatal period, and one subject died after
infancy. Histological examination of a cyst at autopsy in one
additional subject subsequent to the period of study confirmed the cyst
to be lined by neuroblasts and ependymal cells.
CONCLUSIONS
The
incidence of frontal horn cysts in this low birthweight population was
7 per 1000 (0.7%) subjects scanned. They are present in the first week
of life, enlarge, and resolve spontaneously. Survivors with isolated
frontal horn cysts appear to have normal neurodevelopmental outcome.
The prognosis of these distinct frontal horn cysts therefore appears to
be benign.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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M. Epelman, A. Daneman, S. I. Blaser, C. Ortiz-Neira, O. Konen, J. Jarrin, and O. M. Navarro Differential Diagnosis of Intracranial Cystic Lesions at Head US: Correlation with CT and MR Imaging RadioGraphics, January 1, 2006; 26(1): 173 - 196. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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