Cerebellitis


KEY FACTS

Terminology

  • Acute cerebellitis

Imaging

  • Bilateral cerebellar hemispheric gray and white matter low attenuation (NECT), T2/FLAIR hyperintensity (MR); unilateral involvement less common

  • Confluent regions of T2 prolongation, affecting gray and white matter

  • ± pial or subtle parenchymal enhancement

  • DWI/ADC → affected regions typically show increased diffusivity

Top Differential Diagnoses

  • Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM)

  • Infiltrating cerebellar neoplasm

  • Cerebellar infarct

Pathology

  • Reported in association with varicella, Epstein-Barr, enterovirus, rotavirus, human herpesvirus-7, mumps, measles, influenza, and mycoplasma pneumoniae

  • In most cases, definite etiology remains unknown

  • Moderate to severe cerebellar swelling → vascular compression, upward transtentorial herniation, tonsillar herniation, brainstem compression, obstructive hydrocephalus

Clinical Issues

  • Truncal ataxia, dysmetria, and headache

  • Symptoms of ↑ intracranial pressure: Irritability, occipital headache, and vomiting may overshadow manifestations of cerebellar dysfunction

  • Most symptoms and signs resolve completely over weeks to months

  • Surgery rarely necessary to decompress herniating cerebellum, ventricular drain for hydrocephalus

Axial NECT in a 4-year-old girl with proven influenza A infection shows cerebellar hemispheric edema (low attenuation)
involving both gray and white matter. The edema causes upward cerebellar herniation and effacement of the quadrigeminal plate cistern
. The resultant aqueductal compression causes hydrocephalus
.

Axial T2WI MR demonstrates cerebellar edema (T2 hyperintensity) involving both gray and white matter
. Note the compressed 4th ventricle
.

Axial FLAIR MR in a 12-year-old patient with acute onset of cerebellar ataxia demonstrates high signal in the left cerebellar hemisphere
. Note mild mass effect on the 4th ventricle.

Sagittal T1 C+ MR in the same patient shows patchy areas of pial enhancement
along the left cerebellar hemisphere. In acute cerebellitis, unilateral involvement is far less common than bilateral.

TERMINOLOGY

Synonyms

  • Acute cerebellitis

Definitions

  • Parainfectious, postinfectious, or postvaccination cerebellar inflammation

IMAGING

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