| Literature DB >> 28074148 |
E De Witte1, I Wilssens2, D De Surgeloose3, G Dua4, M Moens5, J Verhoeven6, M Manto7, P Mariën8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cerebellar mutism syndrome (CMS) or posterior fossa syndrome (PFS) consists of a constellation of neuropsychiatric, neuropsychological and neurogenic speech and language deficits. It is most commonly observed in children after posterior fossa tumor surgery. The most prominent feature of CMS is mutism, which generally starts after a few days after the operation, has a limited duration and is typically followed by motor speech deficits. However, the core speech disorder subserving CMS is still unclear. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Apraxia of speech; Ataxic dysarthria; Case report; Cerebellar mutism syndrome; Cerebellum; Medulloblastoma; Posterior fossa
Year: 2017 PMID: 28074148 PMCID: PMC5217307 DOI: 10.1186/s40673-016-0059-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cerebellum Ataxias ISSN: 2053-8871
Fig. 1(a-i) Preoperative brain MRI (a-c). The white arrow (a; axial Flair sequence) points to the tumor invading the cerebellar parenchyma bilaterally. The lesion appears slightly hyperintense. The 4th ventricle is invaded (white arrowhead), causing a hydrocephalus (dilatation of the lateral ventricles in b). The tumor expands clearly in the vermis as shown on a sagittal image (c). Early postoperative axial FLAIR slice shows postoperative sequelae at the level of dentate nuclei bilaterally (white arrows in d). The hydrocephalus is resolved (e). The 4th ventricle is moderately dilated, including in the rostral direction. The superior medullary velum is visible (white arrow in f). The superior cerebellar peduncles are involved (white arrows in g), with a slight extension towards the corpora quadrigemina at the level of inferior colliculi (white arrows in h). Crus cerebri are spared bilaterally (white arrows in i). R: right side
Speech/language/cognitive assessments
| TASKS | Raw score (Max) | Z-score/ Pc/ Cut-off score |
|---|---|---|
| SPEECH | ||
| DIAS | ||
| buccofacial apraxia | 5 | C > 2 |
| C1: inconsistent production | 2 | C > 2 |
| C2: worse performance for the Cn than for the V | 2 | C > 2 |
| C3: worse performance for the AS than for SS | 0.8 | C < 0.72a |
| C4: articulatory groping | 3 | C > 0a |
| C5: initiation problems | 4 | C > 0.09a |
| C6: syllable segmentations | 2 | C > 0a |
| C7: cluster segmentations | 2 | C > 0a |
| C8: articulation complexity effect | 0.92 | C > 0.88a |
| LANGUAGE | ||
| ScreeLing | ||
| - phonological index | 24 (24) | C <19 |
| - semantic index | 21 (24) | C < 19 |
| - syntactic index | 18 (24) | C < 19a |
| CELF | ||
| - Receptive language index | 26 (79) | Pc = 8.1a |
| - Expressive language index | 25 (77) | Pc = 6.3a |
| - Language content index | 18 (68) | Pc = 1.6a |
| - Language form index | 18 (76) | Pc = 5.5a |
| BOSTON NAMING TEST-NL | 38 (60) | Z = −2.22 a |
| EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS (also language) | ||
| - Phonological fluency | 4 | Z = −2.90a |
| - Semantic fluency | 8 | Z = −3.10a |
| VERBAL WORKING MEMORY | ||
| CELF | ||
| - Language memory index | 7 (60) | Pc = 0.4a |
Pc Percentile, DIAS Diagnostic Instrument Apraxia of Speech, C characteristic, Cn consonants, V vowels, AS alternating sequences, SS sequential sequences CELF Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals, NL Dutch version
adefective results