Dandy-Walker syndrome: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox_Disease |
__NOTOC__
  Name          = Dandy-Walker syndrome |
  Image          = |
  Caption        = |
  DiseasesDB    = 3449 |
  ICD10          = {{ICD10|Q|03|1|q|00}} |
  ICD9          = {{ICD9|742.3}} |
  ICDO          = |
  OMIM          = 220200 |
  MedlinePlus    = |
  MeshID        = D003616 |
}}
{{CMG}}
{{SI}}
{{SI}}
{{CMG}}; {{AE}} {{ZMalik}}


{{SK}} [[Dandy-Walker Malformation]], [[Dandy-Walker Deformity]]
{| align="right"
|[[File:450px-Dandy-Walker-Variante - MRT T2 sagittal.jpg|thumb|none|300px|Dandy-Walker Variant]]
|}
==Overview==
==Overview==
'''Dandy-Walker syndrome''' (DWS), or Dandy-Walker complex, is a congenital [[brain]] malformation involving the [[cerebellum]] and the fluid filled spaces around it.
Dandy-Walker Syndrome occurs in [[Uterus|utero]] due to disruption in the development of the [[cerebellar]] [[vermis]]. It is characterized by the presence of [[hypoplastic]] [[cerebellar]] [[vermis]], [[hydrocephalus]], and [[cystic]] dilation of [[fourth ventricle]]. It usually presents itself in the first year of life due to [[symptoms]] caused by [[hydrocephalus]]. [[MRI]] is the [[diagnostic]] study of choice and [[surgical]] placement of [[shunt]] is the mainstay of therapy to reduce the [[hydrocephalus]] and to minimize [[brain]] damage.


==Historical Perspective and Eponym==
==Historical Perspective==
It is named for [[Walter Dandy]] and Arthur Earl Walker.<ref>{{WhoNamedIt|synd|433}}</ref>
*The term Dandy-Walker Syndrome was introduced in 1954 by a German [[psychiatrist]] Clemens Benda in the light of the following discoveries:,<ref name="Benda1954">{{cite journal|last1=Benda|first1=Clemens E.|title=The Dandy-Walker Syndrome or The So-Called Atresia of the Foramen Magendie*|journal=Journal of Neuropathology & Experimental Neurology|volume=13|issue=1|year=1954|pages=14–29|issn=1554-6578|doi=10.1093/jnen/13.1.14}}</ref> 
**In 1914, American neurosurgeon Walter Dandy and American [[pediatrician]] Kenneth Blackfan recognized the association between the partial or complete absence of [[cerebellar vermis]], [[hydrocephalus]], and fourth ventricular enlargement.<ref name="Dandy1914">{{cite journal|last1=Dandy|first1=Walter E.|title=AN EXPERIMENTAL, CLINICAL AND PATHOLOGICAL STUDY|journal=American Journal of Diseases of Children|volume=VIII|issue=6|year=1914|pages=406|issn=0096-8994|doi=10.1001/archpedi.1914.02180010416002}}</ref>
**In 1942, Canadian-American [[Neurosurgeons|neurosurgeon]] Arthur Earl Walker and American physician John Taggart contributed by highlighting the possible [[Causes|cause]] to be the maldevelopment of the foramen of Lushka and [[Magendie or Luschka formamina|Magendie]].<ref name="Taggart1942">{{cite journal|last1=Taggart|first1=John K.|title=CONGENITAL ATRESIA OF THE FORAMENS OF LUSCHKA AND MAGENDIE|journal=Archives of Neurology And Psychiatry|volume=48|issue=4|year=1942|pages=583|issn=0096-6754|doi=10.1001/archneurpsyc.1942.02290100083008}}</ref>
*An [[English]] [[surgeon]] named John Bland Sutton was the first to describe the association of underdeveloped [[cerebellar vermis]], [[hydrocephalus]], and an enlarged [[posterior fossa]] in 1887.<ref name="Sutton1886">{{cite journal|last1=Sutton|first1=J. Bland|title=THE LATERAL RECESSES OF THE FOURTH VENTRICLE; THEIR RELATION TO CERTAIN CYSTS AND TUMOURS OF THE CEREBELLUM, AND TO OCCIPITAL MENINGOCELE|journal=Brain|volume=9|issue=3|year=1886|pages=352–361|issn=0006-8950|doi=10.1093/brain/9.3.352}}</ref>


==Classification==
==Classification==
The term Dandy-Walker represents not a single entity, but several abnormalities of brain development which coexist. There are, at present, three types of Dandy-Walker complexes.
There is no established system for the [[classification]] of Dandy-Walker Syndrome. However, Barkovich [[Classification|classified]] [[posterior fossa]] [[CSF]] collection into the following:<ref name="BarkovichKjos1989">{{cite journal|last1=Barkovich|first1=AJ|last2=Kjos|first2=BO|last3=Norman|first3=D|last4=Edwards|first4=MS|title=Revised classification of posterior fossa cysts and cystlike malformations based on the results of multiplanar MR imaging|journal=American Journal of Roentgenology|volume=153|issue=6|year=1989|pages=1289–1300|issn=0361-803X|doi=10.2214/ajr.153.6.1289}}</ref>
*'''Dandy-Walker Complex''' includes [[malformation]] with intact communication between the [[fourth ventricle]] and [[posterior fossa]] [[CSF]] collection. It is further divided into Type A and B depending on the [[cerebellar]] [[vermis]] visibility. In Type A, [[cerebellar vermis]] is [[hypoplastic]] and not visible or deformed and Type B [[cerebellar vermis]] is visible.<ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore|first4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>
*'''[[Posterior fossa]] [[arachnoid]] [[cyst]]''': The [[fourth ventricle]] does not have direct communication with [[posterior fossa]] [[CSF]] collection.<ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore|first4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>
*'''Prominent [[cisterna magna]]''': It is characterized by [[atrophic]] [[vermis]] and [[cerebellar vermis]] with [[cisterna magna]] and [[fourth ventricle]] enlargement without the enlargement of [[posterior fossa]].<ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore|first4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>


They are divided into three closely associated forms: DWS malformation, DWS mega cisterna magna and DWS variant.
==Pathophysiology==
*It is thought that Dandy-Walker Syndrome is the result of disruptions that occur during the development of [[cerebellar vermis]] leading to a [[fourth ventricle]] that is in continuation with the [[posterior fossa]] [[subarachnoid space]].<ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore| sufirst4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>
*Embryonic development of [[cerebellum]] starts at week 5, it forms from the top part of [[metencephalon]]. The [[cerebellar hemisphere]] is formed from the forward surface of [[fourth ventricle]]. The lack of midline fusion of the [[cerebellar hemisphere]] by the 15th week of embryonic development results into underdeveloped [[cerebellar vermis]]. <ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore| sufirst4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>
*The exact [[pathogenesis]] of [[hydrocephalus]] in Dandy-Walker Syndrome is not fully understood. Several factors could play a role in development of [[hydrocephalus]].
**The initial hypothesis of atresia of the foramen of Luschka and Magendie as a possible cause is not well supported. It was found later that these foramina are patent in a large number of patients with [[DWM]] and [[hydrocephalus]] is not present at birth in more than 80% of patients diagnosed with DWM.  Moreover, the closure of one or two foramina can be compensated by the presence of other foramen preventing the collection of fluid.<ref name="TakamiShin2010">{{cite journal|last1=Takami|first1=Hirokazu|last2=Shin|first2=Masahiro|last3=Kuroiwa|first3=Masafumi|last4=Isoo|first4=Ayako|last5=Takahashi|first5=Kan|last6=Saito|first6=Nobuhito|title=Hydrocephalus associated with cystic dilation of the foramina of Magendie and Luschka|journal=Journal of Neurosurgery: Pediatrics|volume=5|issue=4|year=2010|pages=415–418|issn=1933-0707|doi=10.3171/2009.10.PEDS09179}}</ref>
**Another hypothesis was proposed suggesting the outflow impairment to be distal to [[fourth ventricle]] outlets, possibly caused by [[inflammation]] of [[arachnoid mater]] causing outflow obstruction. Excisions of these obstructions have not been able to show whether impaired arachnoid absorption is involved, since the subarachnoid space always takes days to weeks to fill up following excision. <ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore| sufirst4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>
**[[Stenosis]] of [[aqueduct of Sylvius]] once suggested, does not seem to be the causing factor in [[pathogenesis]] of [[hydrocephalus]]. [[Shunts]] placed in the [[posterior fossa]] [[cyst]] almost always drain all above [[ventricles]]. Occasionally when it is present, it is functional [[stenosis]] caused by herniation of posterior fossa content. <ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore| sufirst4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>
**Increased pressure in venous sinuses due to compression from the posterior fossa cyst could also contribute to the pathogenesis or worsening of [[hydrocephalus]], no evidence has been found so far.<ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore| sufirst4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>
**The importance of understanding the [[pathogenesis]] of [[hydrocephalus]] in Dandy-Walker Syndrome forms the basis of choosing most appropriate [[treatment]].
==Causes==


===Malformation===
*Several etiologic factors can lead to Dandy-Walker Syndrome, it is the time (4th to 7th embryonic week) and duration of insult that has more influence on the occurrence of disease rather than the type of causative factor.<ref name="Jaspan2008">{{cite journal|last1=Jaspan|first1=Tim|title=New concepts on posterior fossa malformations|journal=Pediatric Radiology|volume=38|issue=S3|year=2008|pages=409–414|issn=0301-0449|doi=10.1007/s00247-008-0848-3}}</ref>
The DWS [[malformation]] is the most severe presentation of the syndrome. The [[posterior fossa]] is enlarged and the [[tentorium]] is in high position. There is partial or complete [[agenesis]] of the [[cerebellar vermis]]. There is also [[cystic]] [[dilation]] of the [[fourth ventricle]], which fills the [[posterior fossa]]. This often involves [[hydrocephaly]] and complications due to associated genetic conditions, such as [[Spina Bifida]].
*Mendelian conditions like [[Walker-Warburg Syndrome]], [[Mohr Syndrome]], [[Meckel-Gruber Syndrome]] are associated with Dandy-Walker Malformation.<ref name="MurrayJohnson2008">{{cite journal|last1=Murray|first1=Jeffrey C.|last2=Johnson|first2=Jennifer A.|last3=Bird|first3=Thomas D.|title=Dandy-Walker malformation: etiologic heterogeneity and empiric recurrence risks|journal=Clinical Genetics|volume=28|issue=4|year=2008|pages=272–283|issn=00099163|doi=10.1111/j.1399-0004.1985.tb00401.x}}</ref>
*Genetic factors that are associated with DWM [[phenotype]] include:
===Mega cisterna magna===
**[[Trisomy 18]], [[triploidy]] and [[trisomy 13]] most commonly.
The second type is a mega [[cisterna magna]]. The [[posterior cranial fossa|posterior fossa]] is enlarged but it is secondary to an enlarged cisterna. This form is represented by a large accumulation of [[Cerebrospinal fluid|CSF]] in the cisterna magna in the posterior fossa. The [[cerebellar vermis]] and the [[fourth ventricle]] are normal.
**First molecularly defined cause is the [[Z1C1]] and [[Z1C4]] [[heterozygous]] deletion on chromosome 3q24.
**Second DWM-linked locus is the deletion or duplication of [[FOXC1]] gene on 6p25.3.
**Deletions on the long arm of chromosome 13.
*Environmental factors include [[prenatal]] exposure to [[rubella]], [[cytomegalovirus]], [[toxoplasmosis]], [[coumadin]], [[alcohol]] and maternal [[diabetes]].<ref name="MurrayJohnson2008">{{cite journal|last1=Murray|first1=Jeffrey C.|last2=Johnson|first2=Jennifer A.|last3=Bird|first3=Thomas D.|title=Dandy-Walker malformation: etiologic heterogeneity and empiric recurrence risks|journal=Clinical Genetics|volume=28|issue=4|year=2008|pages=272–283|issn=00099163|doi=10.1111/j.1399-0004.1985.tb00401.x}}</ref>
 
==Differentiating Dandy-Walker Syndrome from other Diseases==


* The term mega cisterna magna has been loosely applied to a large retrocerebellar cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)–appearing space with a normal vermis and normal cerebellar hemispheres.
*Dandy-Walker Syndrome must be differentiated from [[Blake's pouch cyst]], [[mega cisterna magna]], and [[posterior fossa arachnoid cyst]].
* More recently, the concept that a cisterna magna should enlarge only in response to volume loss of a damaged cerebellum has been revised. It is believed that when such large spaces manifest with mass effect on the cerebellum, enlargement of the posterior fossa and/or splitting of the falx, and supratentorial extension, they can be attributed not to an enlarged subarachnoid cistern but to a space-occupying lesion.
* Mega cisterna magna occurs in approximately 1% of all brains imaged postnatally.
* Mega cisterna magna has been associated with infarction, inflammation, and infection, particularly cytomegalovirus, as well as with chromosomal abnormalities, especially trisomy 18.
* In the absence of other findings to suggest a posterior fossa lesion, a mega cisterna magna is unlikely to be clinically significant.
*On imaging, prominent retrocerebellar cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)–appearing space with a normal vermis and normal cerebellar hemispheres is seen.
<gallery>
Image:


Mega cisterna magna 1.jpg
*'''Blake's pouch cyst''' occurs if invagination of the [[fourth ventricle]] fails to rupture by the fourth month of gestation. The disease differs from Dandy-Walker Syndrome due to the following features<ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore|first4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>:
**The [[cerebellum]] is not hypoplastic, though it may be compressed by the enlarged posterior fossa (mass effect).
**The [[cerebellar tentorium]]/confluence of sinuses is not raised.
**[[Hydrocephalus]], if present involves all four ventricles.


Image:
*'''Mega cisterna magna''' occurs due to delay in rupture of the [[fourth ventricle]] invagination. The disease differs from Dandy-Walker Syndrome due to the following features<ref name="BosemaniOrman2015">{{cite journal|last1=Bosemani|first1=Thangamadhan|last2=Orman|first2=Gunes|last3=Boltshauser|first3=Eugen|last4=Tekes|first4=Aylin|last5=Huisman|first5=Thierry A. G. M.|last6=Poretti|first6=Andrea|title=Congenital Abnormalities of the Posterior Fossa|journal=RadioGraphics|volume=35|issue=1|year=2015|pages=200–220|issn=0271-5333|doi=10.1148/rg.351140038}}</ref>
**The [[cerebellum]] is not usually [[hypoplastic]].
**The [[fourth ventricle]] is of relatively normal shape.
**[[Hydrocephalus]] is uncommon.


Mega cisterna magna 2.jpg
*'''Posterior fossa [[arachnoid]] cyst''' is a collection of [[cerebrospinal fluid]] in the [[arachnoid mater]]. The disease differs from Dandy-Walker Syndrome due to the following features<ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore|first4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref><ref name="BosemaniOrman2015">{{cite journal|last1=Bosemani|first1=Thangamadhan|last2=Orman|first2=Gunes|last3=Boltshauser|first3=Eugen|last4=Tekes|first4=Aylin|last5=Huisman|first5=Thierry A. G. M.|last6=Poretti|first6=Andrea|title=Congenital Abnormalities of the Posterior Fossa|journal=RadioGraphics|volume=35|issue=1|year=2015|pages=200–220|issn=0271-5333|doi=10.1148/rg.351140038}}</ref>:
**The [[cyst]] is clearly localized in a specific location separate from the fourth ventricle outlets.
**The [[cerebellum]] is not hypoplastic, though it may be compressed by the [[cyst]] (mass effect).
**The [[CSF]] flow in the [[cyst]] is not continuous with that of the [[fourth ventricle]].
**[[Hydrocephalus]], if it occurs, is due to the [[cyst]] pressing on the [[cerebellum]] and compressing the [[cerebral aqueduct]] or [[fourth ventricle]] outlets.


Image:
==Epidemiology and Demographics==
*The [[prevalence]] of Dandy-Walker Syndrome is approximately 1 in 25,000 to 1 in 30,000 live births.<ref name="StambolliuIoakeim-Ioannidou2017">{{cite journal|last1=Stambolliu|first1=Emelina|last2=Ioakeim-Ioannidou|first2=Myrsini|last3=Kontokostas|first3=Kimonas|last4=Dakoutrou|first4=Maria|last5=Kousoulis|first5=Antonis A.|title=The Most Common Comorbidities in Dandy-Walker Syndrome Patients: A Systematic Review of Case Reports|journal=Journal of Child Neurology|volume=32|issue=10|year=2017|pages=886–902|issn=0883-0738|doi=10.1177/0883073817712589}}</ref>
*Slight female predominance is observed.<ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore|first4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>
*Dandy-Walker Syndrome is the underlying cause of 1% to 4% of cases of [[hydrocephalus]].<ref name="HirschPierre-Kahn1984">{{cite journal|last1=Hirsch|first1=Jean-François|last2=Pierre-Kahn|first2=Alain|last3=Renier|first3=Dominique|last4=Sainte-Rose|first4=Christian|last5=Hoppe-Hirsch|first5=Elizabeth|title=The Dandy-Walker malformation|journal=Journal of Neurosurgery|volume=61|issue=3|year=1984|pages=515–522|issn=0022-3085|doi=10.3171/jns.1984.61.3.0515}}</ref>
*There is no established [[racial]] predilection to Dandy-Walker Syndrome.<ref name="ReederBotto2015">{{cite journal|last1=Reeder|first1=Matthew R.|last2=Botto|first2=Lorenzo D.|last3=Keppler-Noreuil|first3=Kim M.|last4=Carey|first4=John C.|last5=Byrne|first5=Janice L. B.|last6=Feldkamp|first6=Marcia L.|title=Risk factors for Dandy-Walker malformation: A population-based assessment|journal=American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A|volume=167|issue=9|year=2015|pages=2009–2016|issn=15524825|doi=10.1002/ajmg.a.37124}}</ref>


Mega cisterna magna 3.jpg
==Risk Factors==


</gallery>
*There are no established [[risk factors]] for Dandy-Walker Syndrome. However, non-Hispanic black [[ethnicity]] and history of [[infertility]] were seen to increase the risk of DWM, further research is required.<ref name="ReederBotto2015">{{cite journal|last1=Reeder|first1=Matthew R.|last2=Botto|first2=Lorenzo D.|last3=Keppler-Noreuil|first3=Kim M.|last4=Carey|first4=John C.|last5=Byrne|first5=Janice L. B.|last6=Feldkamp|first6=Marcia L.|title=Risk factors for Dandy-Walker malformation: A population-based assessment|journal=American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A|volume=167|issue=9|year=2015|pages=2009–2016|issn=15524825|doi=10.1002/ajmg.a.37124}}</ref>


===Variant===
==Screening==
The third type is the variant, which is less severe than the malformation. This form (or forms) represents the most wide-ranging set of symptoms and outcomes of DWS. Many patients who do not fit into the two other categories of DWS are often labeled as variant. The [[fourth ventricle]] is only mildly enlarged and there is mild enlargement of the posterior fossa. The [[cerebellar vermis]] is [[hypoplastic]] and has a variably sized [[cyst]] space. This is caused by open communication of the posteroinferior fourth ventricle and the [[cisterna magna]] through the enlarged [[vallecula]]. Patients exhibit [[hydrocephalus]] in 25% of cases and supratentorial CNS variances are uncommon, only present in 20% of cases. There is no torcular-lambdoid inversion, as usually seen in patients with the malformation. The third and lateral ventricles as well as the brain stem are normal.


==Epidemiology and Demographics==
*There is insufficient evidence to recommend routine [[screening]] for Dandy-Walker syndrome.
The Dandy-Walker complex is a [[genetics|genetically]] sporadic disorder that occurs one in every 25,000 live births, mostly in females.  


== Natural History, Complications and Prognosis ==
==Natural History, Complications, and Prognosis==
The spectrum of outcomes for Dandy-Walker syndrome are diverse. Mortality statistics are often compiled by neurologists who deal with worst case outcomes, which thus reflect a high mortality rate, or grim prognosis – both pre and post natal – in DWS infants.


Children with Dandy-Walker syndrome may never have normal intellectual development, even when the hydrocephalus is treated early and correctly. Longevity depends on the severity of the syndrome and associated malformations. The presence of multiple congenital defects may shorten life span.
*If left untreated, [[patients]] with Dandy-Walker Syndrome may progress to develop severe neurologic deficits. Fifty percent of patients affected die before reaching the third year of life. The 20-23% of patients that reach adult life will have auditory, visual, and motor deficits.<ref name="ChumasTyagi2001">{{cite journal|last1=Chumas|first1=P|last2=Tyagi|first2=A|last3=Livingston|first3=J|title=Hydrocephalus---what's new?|journal=Archives of Disease in Childhood - Fetal and Neonatal Edition|volume=85|issue=3|year=2001|pages=149F–154|issn=1359-2998|doi=10.1136/fn.85.3.F149}}</ref>
*Other possible [[complications]] include [[malformations]] of gastrointestinal, face, limb, heart, and genitourinary system.
*[[Prognosis]] is generally poor if [[hydrocephalus]] is left untreated.


==Diagnosis==
==Diagnosis==
===Symptoms===
Symptoms, which often occur in early infancy, include slow motor development and progressive enlargement of the skull. In older children, symptoms of increased [[intracranial pressure]] such as [[irritability]], [[vomiting]] and [[convulsion]]s and signs of cerebellar dysfunction such as unsteadiness, lack of muscle coordination or jerky movements of the [[eye]]s may occur.


===Physical Examination===
'''Diagnostic Study of Choice'''
Other symptoms include increased head circumference, bulging at the back of the skull, problems with the nerves that control the eyes, face and neck, and abnormal breathing patterns.  
* [[MRI]] is the [[diagnostic]] study of choice.<ref name="KleinPierre-Kahn2003">{{cite journal|last1=Klein|first1=O.|last2=Pierre-Kahn|first2=A.|last3=Boddaert|first3=N.|last4=Parisot|first4=D.|last5=Brunelle|first5=F.|title=Dandy-Walker malformation: prenatal diagnosis and prognosis|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=19|issue=7-8|year=2003|pages=484–489|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-003-0782-5}}</ref>
 
'''History and Symptoms'''
* The majority of the patients (up to 85%) present in the first year of life with signs and symptoms of increased [[intracranial pressure]] such as irritability, increased head circumference, vomiting, [[convulsions]].<ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore|first4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>
 
'''Physical Examination'''
*Signs of [[hydrocephalus]] in infants include increasing head size, vomiting, excessive sleepiness, irritability, downward deviation of the eyes (known as "sunsetting eyes"), and [[seizures]].
 
'''Laboratory Findings'''
*There are no diagnostic laboratory findings associated with Dandy-Walker Syndrome.
 
'''Electrocardiogram'''
*There are no [[ECG]] findings associated with Dandy-Walker Syndrome.
 
'''X-ray'''
*There are no [[x-ray]] findings associated with Dandy-Walker Syndrome.
 
'''Echocardiography or Ultrasound'''
*There are no [[echocardiography]] findings associated with Dandy-Walker Syndrome.
*Fetal 3D [[ultrasound]] can suspect [[posterior fossa]] malformation as early as 14 weeks of [[gestation]]. However, it should be confirmed by a fetal [[MRI]].<ref name="StamatianKovacs2015">{{cite journal|last1=Stamatian|first1=Florin|last2=Kovacs|first2=Tunde|last3=Boitor-Borza|first3=Dan|title=Transvaginal Three-dimensional Sonographic Assessment of the Embryonic Brain: A Pilot Study|journal=Medicine and Pharmacy Reports|volume=88|issue=2|year=2015|pages=152–158|issn=2668-0572|doi=10.15386/cjmed-437}}</ref>


===Imaging Findings===
'''CT scan'''
The key features of this syndrome are an enlargement of the [[fourth ventricle]], the space containing cerebrospinal fluid between the medulla and the cerebellum, a partial or complete absence of the [[cerebellar vermis]], the posterior midline area of cerebellar cortex responsible for coordination of the axial musculature, and cyst formation near the internal base of the [[skull]]. An increase in the size of the fluid spaces surrounding the brain as well as an increase in pressure may also be present. The syndrome can appear dramatically or develop unnoticed.
*If [[MRI]] is unavailable then [[CT]] may be used, but it is less detailed.<ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore|first4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>
*It is suggested that a suspected [[diagnosis]] based on CT should be confirmed by performing an [[MRI]].<ref name="KleinPierre-Kahn2003">{{cite journal|last1=Klein|first1=O.|last2=Pierre-Kahn|first2=A.|last3=Boddaert|first3=N.|last4=Parisot|first4=D.|last5=Brunelle|first5=F.|title=Dandy-Walker malformation: prenatal diagnosis and prognosis|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=19|issue=7-8|year=2003|pages=484–489|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-003-0782-5}}</ref>


Dandy-Walker syndrome is frequently associated with disorders of other areas of the central nervous system including absence of the [[corpus callosum]], the bundle of axons connecting the two [[cerebral hemisphere]]s, and malformations of the [[heart]], [[face]], [[Limb (anatomy)|limb]]s, [[finger]]s and [[toe]]s.
'''MRI'''
<gallery>
*An [[MRI]] is the most important imaging modality in diagnosing Dandy-Walker Syndrome due to its superior [[anatomic]] resolution and [[multiplanar]] imaging.<ref name="KleinPierre-Kahn2003">{{cite journal|last1=Klein|first1=O.|last2=Pierre-Kahn|first2=A.|last3=Boddaert|first3=N.|last4=Parisot|first4=D.|last5=Brunelle|first5=F.|title=Dandy-Walker malformation: prenatal diagnosis and prognosis|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=19|issue=7-8|year=2003|pages=484–489|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-003-0782-5}}</ref>


Dandy Walker Malformation 004.jpg
'''Other Imaging Findings'''
*There are no other imaging findings associated with Dandy-Walker Syndrome.


</gallery>
'''Other Diagnostic Studies'''
*There are no other diagnostic studies associated with Dandy-Walker Syndrome.


Sonographic diagnosis in the first trimester on routine antenatal study is the most common presentation in healthcare systems where screening antenatal studies are carried out regularly. MRI is used in almost all cases in larger institutions in the late second trimester (after 18 weeks) to look for associated anomalies and plan further management at an early stage. The classic malformation is characterized by the presence of large cistern magna, communicating with the fourth ventricle through a defect in the cerebellar vermis going from the hypoplasia of the inferior part to the complete agenesis. The cerebellum is small. As a consequence of the larger cistern magna, the posterior fossa expands and the tentorium is lifted up. In the beginning of the second trimester, the inferior portion of the cerebellar vermis cannot be totally developed, and false positive diagnosis is a possibility at this stage. A combination of MRI and ultrasound at 18 weeks or later is recommended, if there is the suspicion of agenesis of the vermis, especially if the inferior portion is not seen. Hydrocephalus was originally considered as an element of the diagnosis, but recent studies suggest that it is not always present in fetal life, but usually appear in the first months of post-natal period.
==Treatment==


The differential diagnosis includes arachnoid cysts and large intraventricular bleeds, which can be usually differentiated by the size and appearance of the cerebellum. Fetal MRI scans are now used more frequently to confirm and clarify sonographic findings
'''Medical Therapy'''
*There is no available medical therapy for Dandy-Walker Syndrome.


== Treatment ==
'''Surgery'''
Treatment for individuals with Dandy-Walker syndrome generally consists of treating the associated problems, if needed. A special tube ([[shunt (medical)#cerebral shunt|shunt]]) to reduce intracranial pressure may be placed inside the skull to control swelling. Parents of children with Dandy-Walker syndrome may benefit from genetic counseling if they intend to have more children.
* The mainstay of treatment is to reduce the [[hydrocephalus]] and [[posterior fossa]] enlargement.
*Shunt placement is the treatment of choice at the moment to achieve this goal.  
*Superiority of the type of [[shunt]] over the other is not well established. Types of shunts in question are,
**Ventriculoperitoneal (VP): Supratentorial shunt
***Drains [[lateral ventricles]]. It is a [[supratentorial]] [[shunt]].
***Easier to place.
***Low incidence of migration/malposition.
***Early decompression of [[supratentorial]] compartment, therefore preferred by some authors.
***Lower rate of complications overall.
***Less effective in DWM due to the [[infratentorial]] collection of fluid.
**Cystoperitoneal (CP):
***Drains both, [[lateral ventricles]] and [[fourth ventricle]] provided the aqueduct is patent, which can be determined by pre-procedural imaging. It is an infratentorial shunt.
***Higher incidence of migration/malposition <ref name="DomingoPeter1996">{{cite journal|last1=Domingo|first1=Zayne|last2=Peter|first2=Jonathan|title=Midline Developmental Abnormalities of the Posterior Fossa: Correlation of Classification with Outcome|journal=Pediatric Neurosurgery|volume=24|issue=3|year=1996|pages=111–118|issn=1016-2291|doi=10.1159/000121026}}</ref>  and overdrainage. Overdrainage can cause [[cerebral herniation]], it is recommended to use flow regulating or anti-syphon valve. <ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore|first4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>
*** Other [[complications]] include [[brain stem tethering]] and [[subdural hematoma]].<ref name="LiuCiacci1995">{{cite journal|last1=Liu|first1=John C.|last2=Ciacci|first2=Joseph D.|last3=George|first3=Timothy M.|title=Brainstem tethering in Dandy—Walker syndrome: a complication of cystoperitoneal shunting|journal=Journal of Neurosurgery|volume=83|issue=6|year=1995|pages=1072–1074|issn=0022-3085|doi=10.3171/jns.1995.83.6.1072}}</ref> and [[subdural hematoma]]<ref name="BindalStorrs1990">{{cite journal|last1=Bindal|first1=Ajay K.|last2=Storrs|first2=Bruce B.|last3=McLone|first3=David G.|title=Management of the Dandy-Walker Syndrome|journal=Pediatric Neurosurgery|volume=16|issue=3|year=1990|pages=163–169|issn=1423-0305|doi=10.1159/000120518}}</ref>
**Combined VP/CP shunt: Some authors prefer this procedure as it equalizes supratentorial and infratentorial pressure, especially in cases with functional aqueductal stenosis.<ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore|first4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>


==References==
*[[Supratentotial]] shunts are overall more successful in the long term than [[infratentorial]].<ref name="Mohanty2003">{{cite journal|last1=Mohanty|first1=Aaron|title=Endoscopic Third Ventriculostomy with Cystoventricular Stent Placement in the Management of Dandy-Walker Malformation: Technical Case Report of Three Patients|journal=Neurosurgery|volume=53|issue=5|year=2003|pages=1223–1229|issn=0148-396X|doi=10.1227/01.NEU.0000088810.75724.0E}}</ref>
{{reflist|2}}
 
*Other procedure includes [[endoscopic third ventriculostomy]] (ETV).<ref name="SpennatoMirone2011">{{cite journal|last1=Spennato|first1=Pietro|last2=Mirone|first2=Giuseppe|last3=Nastro|first3=Anna|last4=Buonocore|first4=Maria Consiglio|last5=Ruggiero|first5=Claudio|last6=Trischitta|first6=Vincenzo|last7=Aliberti|first7=Ferdinando|last8=Cinalli|first8=Giuseppe|title=Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation|journal=Child's Nervous System|volume=27|issue=10|year=2011|pages=1665–1681|issn=0256-7040|doi=10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4}}</ref>


* {{Chorus|00111}}
{{Congenital malformations and deformations of nervous system}}
'''Primary Prevention'''
*There are no established measures for the [[primary prevention]] of Dandy-Walker Syndrome.


[[Category:Congenital disorders]]
'''Secondary Prevention'''
[[Category:Neurology]]
*Reducing the [[hydrocephalus]] and [[posterior fossa]] enlargement decreases the progression of brain damage and slows the progression of complications.
[[Category:Needs patient information]]


[[de:Dandy-Walker-Fehlbildung]]
==References==
[[pt:Síndrome de Dandy-Walker]]
<references />
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Zehra Malik, M.B.B.S[2]

Synonyms and keywords: Dandy-Walker Malformation, Dandy-Walker Deformity

Dandy-Walker Variant

Overview

Dandy-Walker Syndrome occurs in utero due to disruption in the development of the cerebellar vermis. It is characterized by the presence of hypoplastic cerebellar vermis, hydrocephalus, and cystic dilation of fourth ventricle. It usually presents itself in the first year of life due to symptoms caused by hydrocephalus. MRI is the diagnostic study of choice and surgical placement of shunt is the mainstay of therapy to reduce the hydrocephalus and to minimize brain damage.

Historical Perspective

  • The term Dandy-Walker Syndrome was introduced in 1954 by a German psychiatrist Clemens Benda in the light of the following discoveries:,[1]
    • In 1914, American neurosurgeon Walter Dandy and American pediatrician Kenneth Blackfan recognized the association between the partial or complete absence of cerebellar vermis, hydrocephalus, and fourth ventricular enlargement.[2]
    • In 1942, Canadian-American neurosurgeon Arthur Earl Walker and American physician John Taggart contributed by highlighting the possible cause to be the maldevelopment of the foramen of Lushka and Magendie.[3]
  • An English surgeon named John Bland Sutton was the first to describe the association of underdeveloped cerebellar vermis, hydrocephalus, and an enlarged posterior fossa in 1887.[4]

Classification

There is no established system for the classification of Dandy-Walker Syndrome. However, Barkovich classified posterior fossa CSF collection into the following:[5]

Pathophysiology

  • It is thought that Dandy-Walker Syndrome is the result of disruptions that occur during the development of cerebellar vermis leading to a fourth ventricle that is in continuation with the posterior fossa subarachnoid space.[6]
  • Embryonic development of cerebellum starts at week 5, it forms from the top part of metencephalon. The cerebellar hemisphere is formed from the forward surface of fourth ventricle. The lack of midline fusion of the cerebellar hemisphere by the 15th week of embryonic development results into underdeveloped cerebellar vermis. [6]
  • The exact pathogenesis of hydrocephalus in Dandy-Walker Syndrome is not fully understood. Several factors could play a role in development of hydrocephalus.
    • The initial hypothesis of atresia of the foramen of Luschka and Magendie as a possible cause is not well supported. It was found later that these foramina are patent in a large number of patients with DWM and hydrocephalus is not present at birth in more than 80% of patients diagnosed with DWM. Moreover, the closure of one or two foramina can be compensated by the presence of other foramen preventing the collection of fluid.[7]
    • Another hypothesis was proposed suggesting the outflow impairment to be distal to fourth ventricle outlets, possibly caused by inflammation of arachnoid mater causing outflow obstruction. Excisions of these obstructions have not been able to show whether impaired arachnoid absorption is involved, since the subarachnoid space always takes days to weeks to fill up following excision. [6]
    • Stenosis of aqueduct of Sylvius once suggested, does not seem to be the causing factor in pathogenesis of hydrocephalus. Shunts placed in the posterior fossa cyst almost always drain all above ventricles. Occasionally when it is present, it is functional stenosis caused by herniation of posterior fossa content. [6]
    • Increased pressure in venous sinuses due to compression from the posterior fossa cyst could also contribute to the pathogenesis or worsening of hydrocephalus, no evidence has been found so far.[6]
    • The importance of understanding the pathogenesis of hydrocephalus in Dandy-Walker Syndrome forms the basis of choosing most appropriate treatment.

Causes

Differentiating Dandy-Walker Syndrome from other Diseases

  • Blake's pouch cyst occurs if invagination of the fourth ventricle fails to rupture by the fourth month of gestation. The disease differs from Dandy-Walker Syndrome due to the following features[6]:
    • The cerebellum is not hypoplastic, though it may be compressed by the enlarged posterior fossa (mass effect).
    • The cerebellar tentorium/confluence of sinuses is not raised.
    • Hydrocephalus, if present involves all four ventricles.

Epidemiology and Demographics

  • The prevalence of Dandy-Walker Syndrome is approximately 1 in 25,000 to 1 in 30,000 live births.[11]
  • Slight female predominance is observed.[6]
  • Dandy-Walker Syndrome is the underlying cause of 1% to 4% of cases of hydrocephalus.[12]
  • There is no established racial predilection to Dandy-Walker Syndrome.[13]

Risk Factors

  • There are no established risk factors for Dandy-Walker Syndrome. However, non-Hispanic black ethnicity and history of infertility were seen to increase the risk of DWM, further research is required.[13]

Screening

  • There is insufficient evidence to recommend routine screening for Dandy-Walker syndrome.

Natural History, Complications, and Prognosis

  • If left untreated, patients with Dandy-Walker Syndrome may progress to develop severe neurologic deficits. Fifty percent of patients affected die before reaching the third year of life. The 20-23% of patients that reach adult life will have auditory, visual, and motor deficits.[14]
  • Other possible complications include malformations of gastrointestinal, face, limb, heart, and genitourinary system.
  • Prognosis is generally poor if hydrocephalus is left untreated.

Diagnosis

Diagnostic Study of Choice

History and Symptoms

  • The majority of the patients (up to 85%) present in the first year of life with signs and symptoms of increased intracranial pressure such as irritability, increased head circumference, vomiting, convulsions.[6]

Physical Examination

  • Signs of hydrocephalus in infants include increasing head size, vomiting, excessive sleepiness, irritability, downward deviation of the eyes (known as "sunsetting eyes"), and seizures.

Laboratory Findings

  • There are no diagnostic laboratory findings associated with Dandy-Walker Syndrome.

Electrocardiogram

  • There are no ECG findings associated with Dandy-Walker Syndrome.

X-ray

  • There are no x-ray findings associated with Dandy-Walker Syndrome.

Echocardiography or Ultrasound

CT scan

  • If MRI is unavailable then CT may be used, but it is less detailed.[6]
  • It is suggested that a suspected diagnosis based on CT should be confirmed by performing an MRI.[15]

MRI

  • An MRI is the most important imaging modality in diagnosing Dandy-Walker Syndrome due to its superior anatomic resolution and multiplanar imaging.[15]

Other Imaging Findings

  • There are no other imaging findings associated with Dandy-Walker Syndrome.

Other Diagnostic Studies

  • There are no other diagnostic studies associated with Dandy-Walker Syndrome.

Treatment

Medical Therapy

  • There is no available medical therapy for Dandy-Walker Syndrome.

Surgery

  • The mainstay of treatment is to reduce the hydrocephalus and posterior fossa enlargement.
  • Shunt placement is the treatment of choice at the moment to achieve this goal.
  • Superiority of the type of shunt over the other is not well established. Types of shunts in question are,


Primary Prevention

Secondary Prevention

  • Reducing the hydrocephalus and posterior fossa enlargement decreases the progression of brain damage and slows the progression of complications.

References

  1. Benda, Clemens E. (1954). "The Dandy-Walker Syndrome or The So-Called Atresia of the Foramen Magendie*". Journal of Neuropathology & Experimental Neurology. 13 (1): 14–29. doi:10.1093/jnen/13.1.14. ISSN 1554-6578.
  2. Dandy, Walter E. (1914). "AN EXPERIMENTAL, CLINICAL AND PATHOLOGICAL STUDY". American Journal of Diseases of Children. VIII (6): 406. doi:10.1001/archpedi.1914.02180010416002. ISSN 0096-8994.
  3. Taggart, John K. (1942). "CONGENITAL ATRESIA OF THE FORAMENS OF LUSCHKA AND MAGENDIE". Archives of Neurology And Psychiatry. 48 (4): 583. doi:10.1001/archneurpsyc.1942.02290100083008. ISSN 0096-6754.
  4. Sutton, J. Bland (1886). "THE LATERAL RECESSES OF THE FOURTH VENTRICLE; THEIR RELATION TO CERTAIN CYSTS AND TUMOURS OF THE CEREBELLUM, AND TO OCCIPITAL MENINGOCELE". Brain. 9 (3): 352–361. doi:10.1093/brain/9.3.352. ISSN 0006-8950.
  5. Barkovich, AJ; Kjos, BO; Norman, D; Edwards, MS (1989). "Revised classification of posterior fossa cysts and cystlike malformations based on the results of multiplanar MR imaging". American Journal of Roentgenology. 153 (6): 1289–1300. doi:10.2214/ajr.153.6.1289. ISSN 0361-803X.
  6. 6.00 6.01 6.02 6.03 6.04 6.05 6.06 6.07 6.08 6.09 6.10 6.11 6.12 6.13 6.14 6.15 Spennato, Pietro; Mirone, Giuseppe; Nastro, Anna; Buonocore, Maria Consiglio; Ruggiero, Claudio; Trischitta, Vincenzo; Aliberti, Ferdinando; Cinalli, Giuseppe (2011). "Hydrocephalus in Dandy–Walker malformation". Child's Nervous System. 27 (10): 1665–1681. doi:10.1007/s00381-011-1544-4. ISSN 0256-7040.
  7. Takami, Hirokazu; Shin, Masahiro; Kuroiwa, Masafumi; Isoo, Ayako; Takahashi, Kan; Saito, Nobuhito (2010). "Hydrocephalus associated with cystic dilation of the foramina of Magendie and Luschka". Journal of Neurosurgery: Pediatrics. 5 (4): 415–418. doi:10.3171/2009.10.PEDS09179. ISSN 1933-0707.
  8. Jaspan, Tim (2008). "New concepts on posterior fossa malformations". Pediatric Radiology. 38 (S3): 409–414. doi:10.1007/s00247-008-0848-3. ISSN 0301-0449.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Murray, Jeffrey C.; Johnson, Jennifer A.; Bird, Thomas D. (2008). "Dandy-Walker malformation: etiologic heterogeneity and empiric recurrence risks". Clinical Genetics. 28 (4): 272–283. doi:10.1111/j.1399-0004.1985.tb00401.x. ISSN 0009-9163.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Bosemani, Thangamadhan; Orman, Gunes; Boltshauser, Eugen; Tekes, Aylin; Huisman, Thierry A. G. M.; Poretti, Andrea (2015). "Congenital Abnormalities of the Posterior Fossa". RadioGraphics. 35 (1): 200–220. doi:10.1148/rg.351140038. ISSN 0271-5333.
  11. Stambolliu, Emelina; Ioakeim-Ioannidou, Myrsini; Kontokostas, Kimonas; Dakoutrou, Maria; Kousoulis, Antonis A. (2017). "The Most Common Comorbidities in Dandy-Walker Syndrome Patients: A Systematic Review of Case Reports". Journal of Child Neurology. 32 (10): 886–902. doi:10.1177/0883073817712589. ISSN 0883-0738.
  12. Hirsch, Jean-François; Pierre-Kahn, Alain; Renier, Dominique; Sainte-Rose, Christian; Hoppe-Hirsch, Elizabeth (1984). "The Dandy-Walker malformation". Journal of Neurosurgery. 61 (3): 515–522. doi:10.3171/jns.1984.61.3.0515. ISSN 0022-3085.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Reeder, Matthew R.; Botto, Lorenzo D.; Keppler-Noreuil, Kim M.; Carey, John C.; Byrne, Janice L. B.; Feldkamp, Marcia L. (2015). "Risk factors for Dandy-Walker malformation: A population-based assessment". American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A. 167 (9): 2009–2016. doi:10.1002/ajmg.a.37124. ISSN 1552-4825.
  14. Chumas, P; Tyagi, A; Livingston, J (2001). "Hydrocephalus---what's new?". Archives of Disease in Childhood - Fetal and Neonatal Edition. 85 (3): 149F–154. doi:10.1136/fn.85.3.F149. ISSN 1359-2998.
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 Klein, O.; Pierre-Kahn, A.; Boddaert, N.; Parisot, D.; Brunelle, F. (2003). "Dandy-Walker malformation: prenatal diagnosis and prognosis". Child's Nervous System. 19 (7–8): 484–489. doi:10.1007/s00381-003-0782-5. ISSN 0256-7040.
  16. Stamatian, Florin; Kovacs, Tunde; Boitor-Borza, Dan (2015). "Transvaginal Three-dimensional Sonographic Assessment of the Embryonic Brain: A Pilot Study". Medicine and Pharmacy Reports. 88 (2): 152–158. doi:10.15386/cjmed-437. ISSN 2668-0572.
  17. Domingo, Zayne; Peter, Jonathan (1996). "Midline Developmental Abnormalities of the Posterior Fossa: Correlation of Classification with Outcome". Pediatric Neurosurgery. 24 (3): 111–118. doi:10.1159/000121026. ISSN 1016-2291.
  18. Liu, John C.; Ciacci, Joseph D.; George, Timothy M. (1995). "Brainstem tethering in Dandy—Walker syndrome: a complication of cystoperitoneal shunting". Journal of Neurosurgery. 83 (6): 1072–1074. doi:10.3171/jns.1995.83.6.1072. ISSN 0022-3085.
  19. Bindal, Ajay K.; Storrs, Bruce B.; McLone, David G. (1990). "Management of the Dandy-Walker Syndrome". Pediatric Neurosurgery. 16 (3): 163–169. doi:10.1159/000120518. ISSN 1423-0305.
  20. Mohanty, Aaron (2003). "Endoscopic Third Ventriculostomy with Cystoventricular Stent Placement in the Management of Dandy-Walker Malformation: Technical Case Report of Three Patients". Neurosurgery. 53 (5): 1223–1229. doi:10.1227/01.NEU.0000088810.75724.0E. ISSN 0148-396X.