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. 1984 Jun;4(2):235-40.
doi: 10.1038/jcbfm.1984.32.

Crossed cerebellar diaschisis in ischemic stroke: a study of regional cerebral blood flow by 133Xe inhalation and single photon emission computerized tomography

Crossed cerebellar diaschisis in ischemic stroke: a study of regional cerebral blood flow by 133Xe inhalation and single photon emission computerized tomography

G Meneghetti et al. J Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 1984 Jun.

Abstract

Seventy measurements of CBF were performed in 12 stroke patients by 133Xe inhalation and a rapidly rotating single photon emission computerized tomograph. CBF was measured every other day during the acute phase and at 2- and 6-month follow-up visits. A persistent contralateral cerebellar blood flow depression was evident in five patients with severe hemispheric low flow areas, which correlated with large, hypodense lesions on the computerized tomographic scan. In a sixth patient with a small, deep infarct, a transient crossed cerebellar low flow was observed, while the clinical symptoms persisted. It is concluded from this serial study that crossed cerebellar diaschisis is a common finding in completed stroke. It is probably caused by disconnection of the corticopontine pathways, a disconnection that tends to persist. The phenomenon is in fact less variable than the stroke-related CBF changes in the infarcted hemisphere, in which a period of relative hyperemia is frequently seen.

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