Radiology Case Reports (Aug 2024)

Non-hemorrhagic cerebellar contrast enhancement on intraoperative MRI during a supratentorial glioma resection: Concerning finding of no significance

  • Andrew L. DeGroot, MD,
  • Emily Morris, MD,
  • Omar Hussain, MD,
  • David Smullen, MD,
  • Vladimir Ivanovic, MD,
  • Max Krucoff, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 8
pp. 3376 – 3381

Abstract

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Intraoperative magnetic resonance imaging (iMRI) is a powerful tool used to verify maximal safe resection of gliomas. However, unsuspected new or incidental findings can present difficult clinical scenarios. Here we present a case of a large supratentorial glioma resection where new, incidental bilateral cerebellar hemispheric enhancement was noted on iMRI. A 52-year-old male with a large intra-axial mass spanning the right temporal and parietal lobes underwent a craniotomy for tumor resection utilizing iMRI. Imaging displayed new, remote, bilateral cerebellar enhancement. Upon completion of surgery, the patient was extubated and was at his neurological baseline. An immediate CT scan showed no abnormalities in the cerebellum, and the duration of his hospital stay was unaffected by this finding. An MRI 24 hours after the procedure demonstrated complete resolution of the enhancement. New, remote contrast enhancement in the cerebellum raises concerns for the potentially emergent, well-defined pathology known as remote cerebellar hemorrhage (RCH). However, here we describe a case where these findings turned out to be clinically insignificant, CT-negative, and self-limiting. Therefore, here we call this finding remote non-hemorrhagic cerebellar contrast enhancement (RNHCCE) to differentiate it from RCE, and we discuss nuances and management considerations for differentiating the two.

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