gms | German Medical Science

Joint-Meeting of the German Society for Neuropathology and Neuroanatomy (DGNN) and the Scandinavian Neuropathological Society (SNS)

German Society for Neuropathology and Neuroanatomy

22.09.-24.09.2016, Hamburg

Hot cross bun sign following bilateral anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA) infarction: a case report

Meeting Abstract

  • presenting/speaker Katarina Krbot - Segeberger Kliniken, Bad Segeberg, Germany
  • Dorothea Lisa Hollinde - Segeberger Kliniken, Bad Segeberg, Germany
  • Björn Hauptmann - Segeberger Kliniken, Bad Segeberg, Germany
  • Christian Gaebel - Segeberger Kliniken, Bad Segeberg, Germany

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Neuropathologie und Neuroanatomie. Scandinavian Neuropathological Society. Joint-Meeting of the German Society for Neuropathology and Neuroanatomy (DGNN) and the Scandinavian Neuropathological Society (SNS). Hamburg, 22.-24.09.2016. Düsseldorf: German Medical Science GMS Publishing House; 2016. Doc16dgnnP15

doi: 10.3205/16dgnn25, urn:nbn:de:0183-16dgnn253

Published: September 14, 2016

© 2016 Krbot et al.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. See license information at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.


Outline

Text

Introduction: Hot cross bun sign refers to the cruciform-shaped hyperintensity on Fluid-attenuated-inversion-recovery- (FLAIR-) and T2 images due to the selective loss of myelinated transverse pontocerebellar fibers and neurons in the pontine raphe and sparing of the pontine tegmentum and corticospinal tracts [1]. Although it is found in a significant number of patients with neurodegenerative disorders, especially multisystem atrophy, it seems to be irrespective of the underlying pathogenetic process [2]. Here, we report a case of hot cross bun sign due to Wallerian degeneration following bilateral anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA) infarction.

Objectives: A 73-year-old female was admitted with a nausea, dysarthria, left sided central facial palsy and a left sided Hemiataxia.

Materials & Methods: MRI visualized an infarction in the territory of the left AICA. 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) revealed normal values. The patient was treated with Aspirin and Statin for a secondary prevention.

2 months later, dysarthria became worse. MRI now revealed an acute ischemic stroke in the distribution of the right AICA, so symmetrical infarct lesions in bilateral cerebellar peduncles could now be observed. The secondary prevention was switched on dual antiplatelet therapy.

Results: Follow-up MRI 4 years later demonstrated pontocerebellar atrophy and the hot cross bun sign. ABPM now revealed a nocturnal hypertension and a reverse dipping (inversion of the normal circadian variation), suggestive of an autonomic dysfunction.

Conclusion: Only a few prior descriptions of hot cross bun sign following bilateral AICA infarction are available from the literature [3], [4].

Our case demonstrated a patient with bilateral AICA infarction leading to severe pontocerebellar atrophy with the hot cross bun sign and causing an autonomic dysfunction.


References

1.
Schmidt KI, Spiegel J, Reith W. Klinische und bildgebende Diagnostik bei Morbus Parkinson und Multisystematrophie. Radiologe. 2011;51:273–7. DOI: 10.1007/s00117-010-2095-5 External link
2.
Shrivastava A. The hot cross bun sign. Radiology. 2007;245(2):606-7.
3.
Akiyama K, Takizawa S, Tokuoka K, Ohnuki Y, Kobayashi N, Shinohara Y. Bilateral middle cerebellar peduncle infarction caused by traumatic vertebral artery dissection. Neurology. 2001;56:693–4.
4.
Kataoka H, Izumi T, Kinoshita S, Kawahara M, Sugie K, Ueno S. Infarction limited to both middle cerebellar peduncles. J Neuroimaging. 2011;21:e171–2.