Cerebellar mutism: the predictive role of preoperative language evaluation.
Federico BianchiDaniela Pia Rosaria ChieffoPaolo FrassanitoConcezio Di RoccoGianpiero TamburriniPublished in: Child's nervous system : ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric Neurosurgery (2019)
According to our institutional experience, 20/70 (28.5%) children presented preoperative language impairment and developed cerebellar mutism after surgery. A residual impairment persists in 75% of the cases at a follow-up of 2 years, and in 50% of the cases at 10 years, a finding which actually depicts cerebellar mutism no more as a transient deficit but among long-term sequelae. The appearance of complex dysarthria in the postoperative period is a negative prognostic factor for the long-term persistence of speech disturbances.