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Brief Title: Child's Study of the Impact of PF Lesion on Motor Skills, Language, Cognitive Functioning and Social Cognition
Official Title: Child's Study of the Distant Impact of Posterior Fossa Injury on Motor Skills, Language, Cognitive Functioning, and Social Cognition - a Combination of Clinical Assessments and Brain Imaging
Study ID: NCT04174820
Brief Summary: One of the major complications of posterior fossa surgery is Posterior Fossa Syndrome (PFS). This syndrome is due to a possible complication of surgical excision of a tumor of the cerebellum (4th ventricle) and is characterized by transient postoperative mutism, dysarthria, behavioral, and affective disorders, as well as motor disorders. PFS is thought to be related to axonal lesions. The long-term consequences on the cognitive and psychosocial sphere of PFS have been widely documented. On the other hand, the literature concerning the consequences of this syndrome on language is much restricted. Beyond the language, the role of cerebellum would be central in cognition, some authors even comparing it to a great "conductor" who would underlie the learning of most motor and cognitive automatisms.
Detailed Description: The physiopathology and the anatomo-functional correlates of motor, cognitive, and language functions after surgery of PF tumors are still rare and little known. The objective of this study is to analyze them via morphometric MRI analysis and functional and structural connectivity in children away from PF surgery, coupled with clinical data analysis.
Minimum Age: 6 Years
Eligible Ages: CHILD
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: Yes
CHU Angers, Angers, , France
Hôpital Necker, Paris, , France
Institut Curie, Paris, , France
Hôpitaux Saint-Maurice, Saint-Maurice, , France
Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, , France
Name: Mickaël Dinomais, MD
Affiliation: University Hospital, Angers
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR