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Cerebellar Superficial Siderosis in Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy

  • Emma A. Koemans*
  • , Sabine Voigt
  • , Ingeborg Rasing
  • , Thijs W. van Harten
  • , Wilmar M.T. Jolink
  • , Floris H.B.M. Schreuder
  • , Erik W. van Zwet
  • , Mark A. van Buchem
  • , Matthias J.P. van Osch
  • , Gisela M. Terwindt
  • , Catharina J.M. Klijn
  • , Marianne A.A. van Walderveen
  • , Marieke J.H. Wermer
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

23 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Although evidence accumulates that the cerebellum is involved in cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), cerebellar superficial siderosis is not considered to be a disease marker. The objective of this study is to investigate cerebellar superficial siderosis frequency and its relation to hemorrhagic magnetic resonance imaging markers in patients with sporadic and Dutch-type hereditary CAA and patients with deep perforating arteriopathy-related intracerebral hemorrhage. 

METHODS: We recruited patients from 3 prospective 3 Tesla magnetic resonance imaging studies and scored siderosis and hemorrhages. Cerebellar siderosis was identified as hypointense linear signal loss (black) on susceptibility-weighted or T2*weighted magnetic resonance imaging which follows at least one folia of the cerebellar cortex (including the vermis). 

RESULTS: We included 50 subjects with Dutch-type hereditary CAA, (mean age 50 years), 45 with sporadic CAA (mean age 72 years), and 43 patients with deep perforating arteriopathy-related intracerebral hemorrhage (mean age 54 years). Cerebellar superficial siderosis was present in 5 out of 50 (10% [95% CI, 2-18]) patients with Dutch-type hereditary CAA, 4/45 (9% [95% CI, 1-17]) patients with sporadic CAA, and 0 out of 43 (0% [95% CI, 0-8]) patients with deep perforating arteriopathy-related intracerebral hemorrhage. Patients with cerebellar superficial siderosis had more supratentorial lobar (median number 9 versus 2, relative risk, 2.9 [95% CI, 2.5-3.4]) and superficial cerebellar macrobleeds (median number 2 versus 0, relative risk, 20.3 [95% CI, 8.6-47.6]) compared with patients without the marker. The frequency of cortical superficial siderosis and superficial cerebellar microbleeds was comparable. 

CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that cerebellar superficial siderosis might be a novel marker for CAA.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)552-557
Number of pages6
JournalStroke
Volume53
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb-2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cerebellum
  • Cerebral amyloid angiopathy
  • Intracerebral hemorrhage
  • Magnetic resonance imaging
  • Siderosis

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