Congenital hydranencephaly: report of an adolescent in the north of Mexico

Authors

  • María de los Ángeles Barrón-Muñoz Instituto de Seguridad Social al Servicio de los Trabajadores del Estado, Ciudad Lerdo, Durango, México.
  • Cecilia Hernández-Reyes Centro de Rehabilitación e Inclusión Infantil Teletón, Gómez Palacio, Durango, México.
  • Raquel Emilia Serna-Valdés Centro de Rehabilitación e Inclusión Infantil Teletón, Gómez Palacio, Durango, México.
  • Jorge Torres-Flores Centro de Rehabilitación e Inclusión Infantil Teletón Durango.

Keywords:

hidranencefalia, parálisis cerebral, espasticidad, adolescencia.

Abstract

Background: hydranencephaly is the total or almost total absence of the cerebral hemispheres with persistent cerebrospinal fluid, which affects individuals around the world regardless of gender or ethnicity. There is no effective and curative treatment, and most patients die before reaching the third year of life, although some exceptions can come of age, always requiring multidisciplinary support.
Objective:
to present the case of an adolescent male with congenital hydranencephaly.
Clinical case:
a 11-year-old male from 11 who was admitted at the age of 5 referred to as holoprosencephaly. He was born by caesarean section at 38 weeks of gestation due to rupture of membranes with normal somatometry and Apgar 5, requiring advanced neonatal resuscitation maneuvers. At 30 days head circumference increased to 39 cm and was increasing, reaching 54 cm at 6 months of age. The patient has no control head and trunk, and he was not capable of bipedalism, or developed language or sound emission. A brain scan performed on admission revealed brain parenchyma islets and meninges, corresponding to hydranencephaly. The case is presented by the infrequency with which patients reach adolescence.
Conclusions:
hydranencephaly is a disease that is usually fatal, and cases that survive have severe and disabling neurological sequeles. Although some genetic syndromes associated with hydranencephaly are known, most cases are usually sporadic with no other manifestations. Though the hope that the case presented shows greater progress in their neurological development is not encouraging, physical, occupational and pulmonary therapy may allow better quality of life.
DeCS: HYDRANENCEPHALY; CEREBRAL PALSY; MUSCLE SPASTICITY; CHILD; CASE REPORTS.

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Author Biographies

María de los Ángeles Barrón-Muñoz, Instituto de Seguridad Social al Servicio de los Trabajadores del Estado, Ciudad Lerdo, Durango, México.

Médico Urgenciólogo, Instituto de Seguridad Social al Servicio de los Trabajadores del Estado, Ciudad Lerdo, Durango, México.

Cecilia Hernández-Reyes, Centro de Rehabilitación e Inclusión Infantil Teletón, Gómez Palacio, Durango, México.

Terapeuta Ocupacional, Centro de Rehabilitación e Inclusión Infantil Teletón, Gómez Palacio, Durango, México.

Raquel Emilia Serna-Valdés, Centro de Rehabilitación e Inclusión Infantil Teletón, Gómez Palacio, Durango, México.

Médico en Rehabilitación Física Pediátrica, Centro de Rehabilitación e Inclusión Infantil Teletón, Gómez Palacio, Durango, México.

Jorge Torres-Flores, Centro de Rehabilitación e Inclusión Infantil Teletón Durango.

Genetista. Centro de Rehabilitación e Inclusión Infantil Teletón-Durango.

Published

2016-10-25

How to Cite

1.
Barrón-Muñoz M de los Ángeles, Hernández-Reyes C, Serna-Valdés RE, Torres-Flores J. Congenital hydranencephaly: report of an adolescent in the north of Mexico. Arch méd Camagüey [Internet]. 2016 Oct. 25 [cited 2025 Aug. 29];20(5):546-52. Available from: https://revistaamc.sld.cu/index.php/amc/article/view/4700

Issue

Section

Case Reports