Clinical/methodical issue: Cerebellar syndromes result in distinct clinical symptoms, such as ataxia, dysarthria, dysmetria, intention tremor and eye movement disorders.
Standard radiological methods: In addition to the medical history and clinical examination, imaging is particularly important to differentiate other diseases, such as hydrocephalus and multi-infarct dementia from degenerative cerebellar diseases. Degenerative diseases with cerebellar involvement include Parkinson's disease, multiple system atrophy as well as other diseases including spinocerebellar ataxia.
Achievements: In addition to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), nuclear medicine imaging investigations are also helpful for the differentiation.
Practical recommendations: Axial fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) and T2-weighted sequences can sometimes show a signal increase in the pons as a sign of degeneration of pontine neurons and transverse fibers in the basilar part of the pons. The imaging is particularly necessary to exclude other diseases, such as normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH), multi-infarct dementia and cerebellar lesions.
Keywords: Ataxia; Cerebellar atrophy; Magnetic resonance imaging; Neurodegenerative diseases; Parkinson’s disease.