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Schizencephaly: A Review of 734 Patients

Authors :
Thiago Toshiyuki Matsumura Hondo
Rachel Riera
Marcos Devanir Silva da Costa
Vinícius Lopes Braga
Bruno Fernandes de Oliveira Santos
Sergio Cavalheiro
Luana Pompeu dos Santos Rocha
Michelle de Oliveira Chagas
Source :
Pediatric neurology. 87
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Schizencephaly is a rare congenital cerebral malformation associated with serious neurological manifestations. The number of studies regarding schizencephaly is limited.We conducted a literature review and extracted data from the case reports. Of 199 articles retrieved, 156 articles (734 patients) met our inclusion criteria.Patient characteristics included microcephaly (41.5% of patients), seizures (74.1%), bilateral cleft (41.4%), open lip (61.3%), septo-optic dysplasia (69.1%), and ventricular dilation (60.5%). The majority of clefts were in the frontal and parietal lobes. When these potential association factors were assessed by univariate logistic regression microcephaly (OR = 21.75, P0.001), corpus callosum agenesis (OR = 9, P0.001), motor impairments (OR = 6.21, P0.001), and bilateral clefts (OR = 6.31, P0.001) seems to have the strongest association, but also age at diagnosis10 years (OR = 1.05, P0.001), right (OR = 1.85, P = 0.001) or left (OR = 2.71, P0.001) side clefts and septum pellucidum (OR = 3.7, P = 0.002) agenesis were associated with neurocognitive dysfunctions.We describe novel findings with practical implications for predicting neurocognitive outcomes in patients with schizencephaly. Most patients had neurological impairments including motor (90.0%) or cognitive (77.5%) dysfunctions. Bilateral clefts, motor impairment, microcephaly, and corpus callosum agenesis were strongly associated with neurocognitive impairment. A lack of large cohorts of patients with schizencephaly prevented comparison of our results; most previous studies are case reports or small case series.

Details

ISSN :
18735150
Volume :
87
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8cccabf24329fe8066ddcfdd689512b9