Clinical and imaging features of bilateral Wallerian degeneration of the middle cerebellar peduncles secondary to isolated pontine infarction
10.3760/cma.j.issn.1673-4165.2022.10.005
- VernacularTitle:孤立性脑桥梗死继发双侧小脑中脚华勒变性的临床及影像学特征
- Author:
Hui XU
1
;
Yanwen YAO
;
Hongying BAI
Author Information
1. 郑州大学第二附属医院神经内科,郑州 450014
- Keywords:
Brain stem infarctions;
Pons;
Wallerian degeneration;
Magnetic resonance imaging
- From:
International Journal of Cerebrovascular Diseases
2022;30(10):745-751
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To investigate the clinical and imaging features of bilateral Wallerian degeneration of the middle cerebellar peduncles secondary to isolated pontine infarction.Methods:Patients diagnosed as bilateral Wallerian degeneration of cerebellar middle peduncle after isolated pontine infarction admitted to the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University from June 2017 to December 2021 were retrospectively included. Patients with bilateral Wallerian degeneration of cerebellar middle peduncle after isolated pontine infarction reported between January 2001 and December 2021 were collected by searching Chinese and English databases, and their clinical and imaging characteristics were summarized.Results:A total of 48 patients with bilateral Wallerian degeneration of cerebellar middle peduncle after isolated pontine infarction were included, including 14 patients admitted to the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University, and 34 patients collected by searching the Chinese and English databases. Thirty-three patients were males (68.75%) and 15 were females (31.25%). Their age was 65.8±10.7 years old (range, 37-88 years). Most patients had vascular risk factors, and hypertension was the most common. Dysarthria and limb weakness were the main clinical symptoms at admission. The infarct sites of all 48 patients were located in the blood supply area of paramedian pontine arteries, of which 37 (77.08%) were unilateral (18 on the left and 19 on the right), 6 (12.50%) were bilateral sides, and 5 (10.42%) had incomplete data. When Wallerian degeneration was diagnosed, 8 patients (16.67%) had dizziness or ataxia, 6 (12.50%) had aggravated original symptoms, and the remaining 34 (70.83%) had no new symptoms or aggravated original symptoms. All patients showed symmetrical abnormal signals in bilateral middle cerebellar peduncles, with obvious hyperintensity on T 2 or diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI). One patient showed T 2 hyperintensity in bilateral middle cerebellar peduncle on the next day after the onset of the infarction, which was the earliest case to find secondary Wallerian degeneration after isolated pontine infarction. Conclusions:Wallerian degeneration should be considered when symmetrical lesions of bilateral middle cerebellar peduncles occur after isolated pontine infarction. Wallerian degeneration may occur early after isolated pontine infarction. Most cases have no new symptoms or aggravated original symptoms. Conventional MRI can identify it early.