PurposeCrossed cerebellar diaschisis (CCD) is a state of neural depression caused by loss of connections to injured neural structures remote from the cerebellum usually evaluated by positron emission tomography. Recently it has been shown that dynamic susceptibility contrast perfusion weighted MRI (PWI) may also be feasible to detect the phenomenon. In this study we aimed to assess the frequency of CCD on PWI in patients with acute thalamic infarction.MethodsFrom a MRI report database we identified patients with acute isolated thalamic infarction. Contralateral cerebellar hypoperfusion was identified by inspection of time to peak (TTP) maps and evaluated quantitatively on TTP, mean transit time (MTT), cerebral blood flow and volume (CBF, CBV) maps. A competing cerebellar pathology or an underlying vascular pathology were excluded.ResultsA total of 39 patients was included. Common symptoms were hemiparesis (53.8%), hemihypaesthesia (38.5%), dysarthria (30.8%), aphasia (17.9%), and ataxia (15.4%). In 9 patients (23.1%) PWI showed hypoperfusion in the contralateral cerebellar hemisphere. All of these had lesions in the territory of the tuberothalamic, paramedian, or inferolateral arteries. Dysarthria was observed more frequently in patients with CCD (6/9 vs. 6/30; OR 8.00; 95%CI 1.54–41.64, p = 0.01). In patients with CCD, the median ischemic lesion volume on DWI (0.91 cm3, IQR 0.49–1.54 cm3) was larger compared to patients with unremarkable PWI (0.51 cm3, IQR 0.32–0.74, p = 0.05). The most pronounced changes were found in CBF (0.94±0.11) and MTT (1.06±0.13) signal ratios, followed by TTP (1.05±0.02).ConclusionsMultimodal MRI demonstrates CCD in about 20% of acute isolated thalamic infarction patients. Lesion size seems to be a relevant factor in its pathophysiology.
Assessment of CoW configuration on MRA may be helpful to understand the appearance of unilateral thalamic stroke independent from stroke etiology. A smaller diameter of the relevant CoW segment might be a risk factor for ipsilateral thalamic stroke in the corresponding thalamic vascular territory.
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