Ultraschall Med 2011; 32(6): 622-623
DOI: 10.1055/s-0031-1281643
Case Report

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Diagnosis of Occipital Meningocele at 10 Weeks of Gestation and its Natural Course – Imaging of Meningoencephalocele in Early Postembryonic Period

Diagnose der okzipitalen Meningozele in der 10. Gestationswoche und deren natürlicher Verlauf – Darstellung der Meningoenzephalozele in der frühen nachembryonalen PeriodeA. Basaran
Weitere Informationen

Publikationsverlauf

received: 21.10.2009

accepted: 27.6.2011

Publikationsdatum:
29. August 2011 (online)

Introduction

Cephaloceles are herniations of meninges and/or neural tissue through a congenital skull defect. The skull defects nearly always occur in the midline and 75 – 80 % are occipital (Goldstein RB et al. Radiology 1991; 180: 803 – 808; Sandler MA et al. Radiographics 1986; 6: 1096 – 1099). Cephaloceles have been reported to occur at a rate of 1.2 per 10 000 births and account for approximately 8 – 15 % of neural axis dysraphisms (Goldstein RB et al. Radiology 1991; 180: 803 – 808). Cephaloceles may occur as isolated abnormalities or as part of a genetic or non-genetic syndrome and are associated with wide variety of concomitant central nervous system (CNS) malformations and extra-CNS anomalies (most notably, cystic dysplastic kidneys as a part of Meckel syndrome). Knowledge about the prognosis and other anomalies associated with this abnormality has been derived from studies of neonates and children. Mortality and associated anomalies in the fetus are likely to be underestimated in these studies because affected fetuses are often stillborn or die in utero. The live-born rate among prenatally detected cases is 47 % (Goldstein RB et al. Radiology 1991; 180: 803 – 808). The survival rate of patients born with cephaloceles has been reported to be 21 – 50 % and 74 – 100 % of the survivors are developmentally impaired (Goldstein RB et al. Radiology 1991; 180: 803 – 808; Lorber J et al. Dev Med Child Neurol 1967; Suppl 13: 75 – 86). Isolated cephaloceles have generally not been shown to be familial. When cephaloceles are part of genetic syndrome or associated with anomalies, the inheritance pattern is usually autosomal recessive (Villarreal GB et al. UpToDate 2010). The following provides a report of a case of prenatally diagnosed meningoencephalocele at 10 weeks of gestation with its natural course.

Dr. Ahmet Basaran

Obstetrics & Gynecology, Kulu State Hospital

Kulu devlet hastanesi

42770 Konya

Turkey

Telefon: 90 532 777 83 13

eMail: dr_ahmetbasaran@yahoo.com

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