Recovery from neurological sequelae secondary to oncological brain surgery in an adult growth hormone-deficient patient after growth hormone treatment.

Authors

  • Jesús Devesa
  • Pedro Reimunde
  • Ana Devesa
  • Sonia Souto
  • Manuel Lopez-Amado
  • Pablo Devesa
  • Víctor M. Arce

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0416

Keywords:

cranial nerve injuries, vocal cord paralysis, growth hormone.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To report an unusual case of significant neurological recovery in a 26-year-old growth hormone-deficient female patient with significant neurological sequelae resulting from brain surgery at 11 years of age. DESIGN: Case report. RESULTS: Most of the neurological sequelae present at admission recovered after 8 months of combined growth hormone administration and kinesitherapy/speech therapy. These include an increase in tongue size and mobility and in the amount and quality of saliva, improvement in vocal cords function, recovery of oesophageal peristalsis and disappearance of sleep apnoea. CONCLUSION: Since the patient had undergone intensive physical rehabilitation for a 15-year period with no significant improvement, it is tempting to speculate that the correction of growth hormone deficiency improved her rehabilitation. Therefore, we propose that growth hormone treatment, combined with the adequate kinesitherapy, may be a useful therapy for effective recovery from some neurological deficits in patients with growth hormone deficiency.

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Published

2009-08-04

How to Cite

Devesa, J., Reimunde, P., Devesa, A., Souto, S., Lopez-Amado, M., Devesa, P., & Arce, V. M. (2009). Recovery from neurological sequelae secondary to oncological brain surgery in an adult growth hormone-deficient patient after growth hormone treatment. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 41(9), 775–777. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0416

Issue

Section

Case Report