| Literature DB >> 35331151 |
Alessandra Consales1,2, Giulia Ardemani1,2, Claudia Maria Cinnante3, Mariana Rita Catalano4, Claudia Giavoli2,5, Roberta Villa6, Maria Iascone7, Camilla Fontana1,2, Maria Francesca Bedeschi8, Monica Fumagalli1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pallister-Hall syndrome (OMIM #146510) is a rare autosomal dominant condition caused by a mutation in the GLI3 gene. The cardinal feature of Pallister-Hall syndrome is the presence of hypothalamic hamartomas, which may manifest with seizures, panhypopituitarism and visual impairment. In Pallister-Hall syndrome, dysplastic histogenetic processes responsible for hypothalamic hamartomas are thought to disrupt early craniofacial development. The clinical presentation of Pallister-Hall syndrome may include: characteristic facies (low-set and posteriorly angulated ears, short nose with flat nasal bridge), cleft palate and uvula, bifid epiglottis and laryngotracheal cleft, limb anomalies (e.g., polysyndactyly, short limbs and nail dysplasia), anal atresia, genitourinary abnormalities and congenital heart defects. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Hypothalamic hamartoma; Pallister-Hall syndrome; brain MRI; cerebral ultrasound
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35331151 PMCID: PMC8943937 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-022-02618-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Fig. 1Mid-sagittal ultrasound scan through the anterior fontanel: A Twin A; B Twin B. White arrows indicate a round mass-like lesion in the suprasellar region, anterior to the brainstem, isoechoic to the surrounding parenchyma. The third ventricle’s floor is superiorly displaced, with a patent Sylvian aqueduct
Comparative clinical manifestations of Twin A and Twin B
| Neonatal features | Twin A | Twin B |
|---|---|---|
| BW 1900 g (19th), L 43 cm (17th), CC 29 cm (3rd) | BW 1780 g (12th), L 41 cm (4th), CC 31 cm (29th) | |
| Prominent forehead, sparse eyebrows, hypertelorism with divergent strabismus, depressed nasal root | Prominent forehead, sparse eyebrows, hypertelorism with divergent strabismus, depressed nasal root | |
| Bilateral post-axial polydactyly type B, IV-V finger syndactyly of the right hand, left clubfoot | Right hand post-axial polydactyly type B | |
| Two left ventricular false tendons | Left ventricular false tendon | |
| CAKUT with chronic renal failure, 2nd grade bilateral VUR; micropenis | Transient bilateral calico-pyelic dilatation and of the proximal ureter | |
| Anal atresia | Anal atresia | |
| Omega-shaped epiglottis, mild laryngomalacia | Normal | |
| GHD | Subclinical hypothyroidism (with normal thyroid gland US), GHD | |
| No | No | |
| Normal | Anomalies in the temporal region (with asymmetry, left>right): slow waves both isolated and in sequences, sometimes in the form of sharp waves. | |
| Normal | Normal | |
| Normal | Normal | |
| Fig | Fig | |
| Cyst of the filum terminale | Normal | |
| Fig | Fig |
Abbreviations: BW Birthweight, L Length, CC Cranial circumference, CAKUT Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract, VUR Vesicoureteral reflux, GI Gastro-intestinal, ENT Ear-nose-throat, GHD Growth hormone deficiency, US Ultrasound, CUS Cranial ultrasound, MRI Magnetic resonance imaging, EEG Electoencephalography
Fig. 2Brain MRI of Twin A performed at 35+ 6 weeks' gestation: TSE T2 axial (A), sagittal (B) and coronal (C) images showing a mass in the hypothalamic-tuber cinereum region (red arrow), with craniocaudal development from the third ventricle to the peripontine cisterns, characterized by a signal similar to the brain parenchyma. Brain MRS performed by PRESS technique with TE = 144 ms, with a single voxel placed in the center of the lesion (D), showing a slight reduction of N-acetylaspartate (NAA) within the lesion (dotted red arrow), compared to normal parenchyma (E), with single voxel placed in the periventricular posterior white matter (dotted red arrow)
Fig. 3Brain MRI of Twin B comparing TSE T2 sagittal (A) and axial (B) images performed at 35+ 6 weeks' gestation, with the same images (C, D) performed at 50+ 6 weeks of corrected age: the lesion (dotted red arrow) increased in size causing a more relevant mass effect on the surrounding structures and an initial displacement of the cerebellar tonsils through the foramen magnum (red arrow). The lesion still appeared isointense to the surrounding parenchyma, with myelination-like aspects and thickening of the intra-lesional cortical component
Review of all reported cases of hypothalamic hamartomas visualized through cranial ultrasound
| Author (year) | GA at birth (weeks) | Age at diagnosis | Neuroimaging | Histological confirmation | PHS Diagnosis | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prenatal Examination | Postnatal Examination | ||||||||||||
| CUS | MRI | ||||||||||||
| Location | Size | Echogenicity | Hydrocephalus | Mass effect | Size (cm) | Signal | MRS | ||||||
Martijn (1984) [ | n.a. | 4 months | n.a. | n.a. | 2 | Hyperechoic | yes | yes | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | no |
Guibaud et al. (1995) [ | Term | 14 days | n.a. | Midline, anterior to the posterior fossa | 4.6 × 3.3 | Hyperechoic | no | yes | 5 | T1: isontense, T2: eterogeneously hyperintense. Nonenhancing | n.a. | yes, examination of surgical specimen | no |
Kos et al. (2008) [ | 36 | n.a. | n.a. | Hypothalamus | 2.5 | Isoechoic | no | n.a. | n.a. | Isointense on all sequences. Nonenhancing. | n.a. | n.a. | yes, GLI3 mutation (Q717X) |
Joo Yeon Lee et al. (2016) [ | 36 | n.a. | 28 weeks GA: arachnoid cyst | Anterior to the left temporal lobe | 5.1 × 3.5 | Isoechoic | no | yes | 6 × 3 × 4.3 | Isointense on all sequences. Nonenhancing. Few areas with slightly high T1 signal intensity. | Chemical composition similar to white matter | yes, surgical biopsy | no |
| Present Case | 34 | 10 days | Unremarkable | Suprasellar region, anterior to the brainstem | 2.1 × 1 | Isoechoic | no | Displacement of third ventricle floor | 3.2 × 2.8 × 1.6 | Isointense | Mild reduction of NAA | no | yes, GLI3 heterozygous mutation (p.Thr694fs) |
Abbreviations: GA Gestational age, CUS Cranial ultrasound, MRI Magnetic resonance imaging, MRS Magnetic resonance spectroscopy, PHS Pallister-Hall syndrome; n.a., data not available; NAA, N-acetylaspartate