Can you get pregnant with craniopharyngioma?

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asked Oct 2, 2023 in Pregnancy by Gran888se (1,380 points)
Can you get pregnant with craniopharyngioma?

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answered Oct 27, 2023 by Adenyaden (5,480 points)
You can in rare cases get pregnant with or after a craniopharyngioma although it's rare to get pregnant after craniopharyngioma.

Craniopharyngioma can metastasize although it's rare for it to metastasize.

The treatment for craniopharyngioma is surgery with or without radiation therapy.

A partial resection is followed by radiation therapy.

Sometimes cyst drainage is done with or without surgery or radiation therapy.

Craniopharyngioma can be cured through treatments and most people who seek treatment for craniopharyngioma are cured.

Craniopharyngiomas are pretty serious even though they are not cancerous.

The reason craniopharyngiomas are serious is because of their aggressive local growth and location near delicate structures in the brain, craniopharyngiomas can cause devastating neurological symptoms.

And their propensity to attach to vital glands, brain structures, and blood vessels makes it difficult to remove entire tumors with surgery.

The symptoms of a craniopharyngioma are.

Headache.
Peripheral field vision loss.
Eye movement weakness/double vision.
Vomiting.
Personality changes, confusion.
Hormonal insufficiency/hypothalamic dysfunction.
Adrenal insufficiency.

Craniopharyngioma is a rare brain tumor which usually form near the pituitary gland and the hypothalamus.

The Craniopharyngiomas are benign (not cancer) and do not spread to other parts of the brain or to other parts of the body.

The symptoms of craniopharyngiomas are.

Headache.
Peripheral field vision loss.
Eye movement weakness/double vision.
Vomiting.
Personality changes, confusion.
Hormonal insufficiency/hypothalamic dysfunction.
Adrenal insufficiency.

Although because of their aggressive local growth and location near delicate structures in the brain, craniopharyngiomas can cause devastating neurological symptoms.

And their propensity to attach to vital glands, brain structures, and blood vessels makes it difficult to remove entire tumors with surgery.

Craniopharyngiomas are most commonly found in children between the ages of 5 and 14.

However, adults over age 50 can also develop these tumors.

Following treatment, patients diagnosed with a craniopharyngioma have 10-year survival rates of approximately 90%.

This means that 90% of patients live at least 10 years.

Apart from those deaths directly attributed to the tumor and those related to the surgical interventions, the risk of cardio-/cerebrovascular and respiratory mortality is increased.

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