L’hermitte–Duclos Disease In An Infant: A Case Report With Review of Literature

Authors

  • Uwais Riaz Ul Hasan Department of General Surgery, Al Omran General Hospital, Al Hassa, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Author
  • Dr.Khathija Hasan Department of General Surgery, Al Omran General Hospital, Al Hassa, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Author
  • Dr. Farooq Ahmed Qureshi Department of General Surgery, Al Omran General Hospital, Al Hassa, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Author
  • Dr. Shaima Khan Department of General Surgery, Al Omran General Hospital, Al Hassa, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Author
  • Dr. Victor Effiong Obong Department of General Surgery, Al Omran General Hospital, Al Hassa, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Author
  • Dr.Mohammed Abdullah Ahmed Alkhalaf Department of General Surgery, Al Omran General Hospital, Al Hassa, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Author
  • Dr. Mohammed AbdulMajeed Alghadeer Department of General Surgery, Al Omran General Hospital, Al Hassa, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Author
  • Dr. Ali AbdulMajeed Alghadeer Department of General Surgery, Al Omran General Hospital, Al Hassa, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Author
  • Dr. Ali Hussain AlShuhayb Department of General Surgery, Al Omran General Hospital, Al Hassa, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Author
  • Dr.ShehlaRiazUlHasan Department of General Surgery, Al Omran General Hospital, Al Hassa, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Author
  • Dr. Moath AbdulAziz AlMasoud Hospital Director Al Omran General Hospital, Al Hassa, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33425/2768-0428.1019

Keywords:

L’hermitte–Duclos, tiger strip MRI, Signs in infant.

Abstract

Jacques Jean Lhermitte a French neurologist and P. Duclos in 1920 first described a growth in the cerebellum gangliocytoma, as a rare hamartomata’s lesion due to abnormal development of the cerebellum. Since then it has been called by many names Lhermitte-Duclos disease, dysplastic gangliocytoma of the cerebellum, benign hypertrophy of the cerebellar cortex, granular cell hypertrophy and Purkinjeoma. It is a characteristic radiological feature and there has been reported in over 200 cases worldwide in adolescents [1] and old people but a handful of cases are detected and reported in infants. We report a 6 month old male child whose parents reported a history of irritability and typical lion facies with normal mile stones and radiological features of L’hermitte–Duclos disease.

Published

2025-08-01

Issue

Section

Articles