
Crossed Cerebellar Diaschisis
Author(s) -
ShouWei Han,
Xiaopeng Wang,
Kai Xu,
Chunfeng Hu,
ShouWei Han,
ShouWei Han,
ShouWei Han,
ShouWei Han,
ShouWei Han,
ShouWei Han,
ShouWei Han,
ShouWei Han,
Xiaopeng Wang,
Xiaopeng Wang,
Xiaopeng Wang,
Xiaopeng Wang,
Xiaopeng Wang,
Xiaopeng Wang,
Xiaopeng Wang,
Xiaopeng Wang,
Xiaopeng Wang,
Xiaopeng Wang,
Xiaopeng Wang,
Xiaopeng Wang,
Kai Xu,
Kai Xu,
Kai Xu,
Kai Xu,
Kai Xu,
Kai Xu,
Kai Xu,
Kai Xu,
Kai Xu,
Kai Xu,
Kai Xu,
Kai Xu,
Chunfeng Hu,
Chunfeng Hu,
Chunfeng Hu,
Chunfeng Hu,
Chunfeng Hu,
Chunfeng Hu,
Chunfeng Hu,
Chunfeng Hu,
Chunfeng Hu,
Chunfeng Hu,
Chunfeng Hu,
Chunfeng Hu
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.59
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1536-5964
pISSN - 0025-7974
DOI - 10.1097/md.0000000000002526
Subject(s) - medicine , diaschisis , neuroscience , cerebellum , biology
Crossed cerebellar diaschisis (CCD) describes a depression of oxidative metabolism glucose and blood flow in the cerebellum secondary to a supratentorial lesion in the contralateral cerebral hemisphere. PET/MR has the potential to become a powerful tool for demonstrating and imaging intracranial lesions .We herein report 3 cases of CCD imaging using a tri-modality PET/CT–MR set-up for investigating the value of adding MRI rather than CT to PET in clinical routine. We describe 3 patients with CCD and neurological symptoms in conjunction with abnormal cerebral fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography/computed tomography-magnetic resonance imaging (PET/CT–MR) manifestations including arterial spin-labeling (ASL) and T2-weighted images. In all, 18 FDG-PET/CT detected positive FDG uptake in supratentorial lesions, and hypometabolism with atrophy in the contralateral cerebellum. More than that, hybrid PET/MRI provided a more accurate anatomic localization and ASL indicated disruption of the cortico-ponto-cerebellar pathway. Using pathology or long-term clinical follow-up to confirm the PET and ASL findings, the supratentorial lesions of the 3 patients were respectively diagnosed with cerebral infarction, recurrent glioma, and metastasis. The reports emphasize the signicance of multimodality radiological examinations. Multimodality imaging contributes to proper diagnosis, management, and follow-up of supratentorial lesions with CCD.