Abstract

To present the longitudinal MR imaging of 4 children with an acquired corpus callosum hump, in order to demonstrate graphically that this represents a dysmorphology caused through a constellation of pre-existing pathology, timing, and complications of treatment. Four cases with a corpus callosum hump were evaluated for common findings in the clinical history and on MRI scans. Those patients with available follow-up imaging were specifically evaluated for the presence of the hump on initial neonatal imaging and for evidence of development and progression of the deformity over time. Corpus callosum length was measured and compared against normal standards. Congenital hydrocephalus, chronic ventricular over-shunting, white matter volume loss, and lateral ventricle communication were common to all cases. Corpus callosum length was above normal values. The corpus callosum hump term was previously described as dysplasia but was not present on initial scans in our cases. We conclude that the corpus callosum hump can be acquired as a complication of over-shunting in children with congenital hydrocephalus. Thus, we present our examples as "acquired hump of the corpus callosum," which differs from the prior example. We postulate that the lengthening of the stretched corpus callosum due to chronic hydrocephalus in the pre-myelinated state renders it unable to return to its normal shape when the ventricles are drained. Over-shunting of both lateral ventricles simultaneously in the absence of a septum pellucidum results in collapse and folding in of the corpus callosum on itself, resulting in the hump.

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