Left Pulvinar Thalamic Tumor with Ventricular Atrial Extension Presenting as Network-Level Cognitive and Gait Dysfunction
Florin Mihail Filipoiu, Stefan Oprea, Cosmin Pantu, Matei Șerban, Răzvan-Adrian Covache-Busuioc, Corneliu Toader, Mugurel Petrinel Radoi, Octavian Munteanu, Raluca Florentina Tulin

TL;DR
A rare brain tumor in the thalamus and ventricle caused cognitive and gait issues, and a careful surgical approach improved the patient's function.
Contribution
A novel physiology-guided surgical approach for thalamic-ventricular tumors is proposed and demonstrated.
Findings
Quantified cognitive and gait dysfunction improved after surgery.
Physiology-guided decompression reduced pressure symptoms effectively.
No tumor recurrence was observed in follow-up imaging.
Abstract
Background and Clinical Significance: Deep thalamic and periventricular lesions are uncommon in adults but can result in significant loss of function because of their convergence on three interdependent processes: thalamocortical state regulation, throughput of periventricular long association systems, and ventricular compartmental compliance. The resulting combination of executive control collapse, retrieval-weighted language fragility, and load-sensitive gait instability may occur early after a lesion forms an atrial/posterior horn interface, and pressure-linked autonomic symptoms may be late to develop. Screening deficits will likely be minimal and therefore underreported. Objective/Aim: To present a thalamic–atrial/posterior horn tumor case with quantified load-sensitive cognitive–language–gait dysfunction and to detail a physiology-guided, sequence-driven decompression approach…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeurological and metabolic disorders · Epilepsy research and treatment · Neurobiology of Language and Bilingualism
