• World Neurosurg · Sep 2017

    Conservative and surgical treatment of patients with pineal cysts: A prospective case series of 110 patients.

    • Martin Májovský, David Netuka, and Vladimír Beneš.
    • Department of Neurosurgery of 1st Faculty of Medicine of Charles University and Military University Hospital, Prague, Czechoslovakia. Electronic address: martin.majovsky@uvn.cz.
    • World Neurosurg. 2017 Sep 1; 105: 199-205.

    BackgroundA pineal cyst is a relatively common benign condition of the pineal gland. The clinical management of patients with a pineal cyst remains controversial, especially when patients present with nonspecific symptoms.MethodsWe performed a prospective study between 2000 and 2016. All patients with a pineal cyst >7 mm were included. Epidemiologic data, presenting symptoms, surgical results, and radiographic and clinical follow-up were documented.ResultsA total of 110 patients were enrolled in the present study. The most common presenting symptoms were tension headache (62.7%), vertigo (16.4%), migraine (12.7%), syncope (10.9%), nausea (8.2%), and diplopia (8.2%). Symptoms worsened during the follow-up period in 17 patients (15.5%), improved in 13 patients (11.8%), and remained stable in 81 patients (73.6%). The mean follow-up was 79.2 months. A pineal cyst increased in size during the follow-up in 6 patients (5.5%) and decreased in size in 9 patients (8.2%). Twenty-one patients underwent pineal cyst resection; 20 patients (95.2%) reported some improvement in their presenting symptoms, and 10 patients (47.6%) were symptom free after the surgery.ConclusionWe present the largest clinical series of patients with pineal cysts. Surgery, if indicated properly, is a legitimate treatment modality for symptomatic patients with satisfactory results. Relief of symptoms, even nonspecific ones, is achieved in the majority of cases. Simple growth of the cyst in the first decades of life is a part of the natural course and should not be considered as an indication for surgery.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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