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Any growth of abnormal tissue that forms a mass in the brain is a brain tumor. While there are many types of tumors — each with its own properties, likely locations, cell types and probable outcomes — all pose risks and should be carefully diagnosed and appropriately addressed. Recent years have seen tremendous progress in the treatment of brain tumors. Much of that progress has unfolded here at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford, where some of the world’s best pediatric brain tumor specialists are dedicated to understanding and treating the condition.
Because children’s brains are still developing, the tumors they get are different from adult tumors on both structural and molecular-biological levels. Fortunately for our young patients, children’s tumors are, on the whole, far more treatable than their adult counterparts. For one thing, whereas most adult brain tumors have spread (or metastasized) to the brain from somewhere else in the body, most children’s brain tumors originate there. That means that the brain tumor treatment, too, can usually remain more localized. If their brain tumors are diagnosed early enough and treated appropriately, many young patients go on to lead normal lives. Because of the differences between childhood and adult tumors, it is preferable, if possible, for young patients to be treated at specialized pediatric brain tumor centers such as Packard Children’s.
All brain tumors arise from normal brain cells running amuck. Some types result from cellular changes that switch on genes that cause uncontrolled growth. Others result from changes that switch off genes that normally suppress growth. In both cases, the disease hacks into essential cellular code and causes it to malfunction. Some “hacked” tumor-causing genes can be passed down from a parent, but most of the code mistakes, called genetic mutations, occur spontaneously and for no known reason. They are called idiopathic.
Brain tumors can cause several different symptoms depending on which parts of the brain they affect. A tumor near the pineal gland, for instance, may disrupt the secretion of melatonin, a hormone that helps regulate the sleep cycle. A tumor growing near the nerves that connect the eyes to the brain may alter vision. Because brain tumors grow in a closed space inside the skull, many of them eventually cause an increase in intracranial pressure and the symptoms that can go along with it: headache, weakness, nausea, vomiting or seizures. In some cases, symptoms appear suddenly when a tumor reaches a certain size or enters a particular brain area. In other cases, symptoms appear and intensify gradually.
There are several kinds of childhood brain tumors. On the broadest level, all of them can be divided into two types: malignant and benign. The word “malignant” roughly means aggressively harmful. Tumors are malignant when they are composed of cancerous cells, when they occupy particularly dangerous areas or when they are fast growing. The word “benign” means gentle or harmless. Tumors with this classification usually pose less threat, but they still frequently require surgical removal.
The keys to mapping treatment in every case are determining precisely what kind of brain tumor a child has and getting a high-resolution depiction of its dimensions and margins. Packard Children’s neurosurgeons, oncologists, neurologists, neuropathologists and neuro-radiologists are among the best in the world. They collaborate to deploy cutting-edge diagnostic imaging and surgical technology to identify and treat pediatric brain tumors quickly and thoroughly while navigating the safest and least disruptive route to the best possible outcome for each patient.
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