ISSN: 2327-4972
+44-77-2385-9429
Department of Family Medicine, Vanderbilt University, Middlesboro, USA
Case Report
Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma: Retrospective Case Study of a 19-Year-Old Male at a Kentucky Rural Clinic
Author(s): Radwa Clarissa Omar*
Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma (DIPG) is a proliferative brain tumor that is aggressive in nature and rapid growing. DIPG predominantly affects the pons, a part of the brain stem that is responsible for regulating vital physiologic functions such as breathing, heart rate and hemodynamic stability. In the United States, about 300 children are diagnosed with DIPG each year, affecting children between 5 and 10 years of age, but may occur in younger populations and in some cases, teenage populations. DIPGs typically have a lethal prognosis due to the inability to surgically resect tumors safely, and current drug and radiation therapies ultimately being ineffective. Survival rates from high-grade brain stem tumors in childhood remains very poor, with one estimate approximating that only four in ten young pediatric patients diagnosed with a DIPG will live one year after diagnosis. This ca.. View More»
DOI:
10.37532/2327-4972.24.13.181