Pediatric anterior visual pathway gliomas: trends in fluid and electrolyte dynamics and their management nuances

Purpose Trends in pre- and postoperative fluid, electrolyte and osmolarity changes, and incidence of diabetes insipidus (DI) were assessed in pediatric patients with anterior visual pathway gliomas (AVPGs). Methods Thirty-three patients with AVPGs (age < 16 years) were divided into two groups: (1...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Child's nervous system Vol. 31; no. 3; pp. 359 - 371
Main Authors: Singh, Devesh K., Behari, Sanjay, Jaiswal, Awadhesh K., Sahu, Rabi N., Srivastava, Arun K., Mehrotra, Anant, Dabadgaon, Preeti
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Berlin/Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg 01-03-2015
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Purpose Trends in pre- and postoperative fluid, electrolyte and osmolarity changes, and incidence of diabetes insipidus (DI) were assessed in pediatric patients with anterior visual pathway gliomas (AVPGs). Methods Thirty-three patients with AVPGs (age < 16 years) were divided into two groups: (1) no hypothalamic involvement [NHI; n  = 17 (51.5 %) including optic (5, 15.2 %); chiasmal (5, 15.2 %); and optico-chiasmal (7, 21.2 %)] and (2) hypothalamic involvement [HI; n  = 16 (48.5 %) including chiasmal-hypothalamic (12, 36.4 %) and optico-chiasmal-hypothalamic (4, 12.1 %)]. Frontotemporal transylvian decompression/biopsy was undertaken in 32 patients, while one patient (with severe diencephalic syndrome) was treated conservatively. Their endocrinal and fluid/electrolyte balance, serum osmolarity, and DI status were noted. Chi-square test compared clinical/endocrinological parameters, and unpaired T test evaluated mean daily water/electrolyte changes ( p value < 0.05: significant). Results Significant visual deterioration (perception of light (PL) positive (left: n  = 4; right: n  = 4) and PL negative (left: n  = 5; right: n  = 5) was encountered due to optic atrophy. Larger lesions (>3 cm), hydrocephalus [(NHI: n  = 7, 41.18 %; HI: n  = 12, 75 %), endocrinopathies ( p  = 0.047), Na + /K + derangements, and preoperative DI ( n  = 8, p  = 0.004)] were present in the group HI. Increased postoperative urine output (almost double in those with hypothalamic involvement) and hypernatremia/hyperkalemia were seen in group HI until the sixth postoperative day ( p  < 0.05). Two patients with progressive hypernatremia without increased urine output showed dehydration on central venous pressure monitoring and improved with vasopressin administration. Five patients [NHI: n  = 4 (23.5 %); HI: n  = 1 (6.3 %)] had neurofibromatosis types I and 3 (NHI: n  = 1, 5.9 %; HI: n  = 2, 12.5 %) had a diencephalic syndrome. Conclusions Hypothalamic infiltration significantly increases the incidence of DI and fluid and electrolyte disturbances. Strict vigilance over postoperative fluid balance is mandatory during the first postoperative week. Rapidly rising serial serum sodium values without increased urine output mandates immediate central venous pressure measurement to detect DI associated with dehydration.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0256-7040
1433-0350
DOI:10.1007/s00381-014-2606-1