Abstract
Microcephalies vary widely in clinical severity and in morphology. The purpose of
this study is to determine the frequency of disproportion between the size of the
cerebrum and the size of midbrain and hindbrain structures in infants and children
with microcephaly, as analysis of such disproportions might aid understanding of these
disorders and facilitate testing for specific genetic causes. The relative sizes of
the forebrain, each component of the brain stem, and vermis and hemispheres of the
cerebellum were analyzed visually on magnetic resonance (MR) images of 110 microcephalic
patients. A disproportionally large cerebellum, compared with the cerebrum, was found
in 50 cases (45.5%), a proportional cerebellum in 49 cases (44.5%), and a disproportionally
small cerebellum in 11 cases (10%). Proportional cerebella were most common in mild
(86%) and moderate (55%) microcephaly patients, whereas disproportionately large cerebella
were most common in severe (57%) and moderate (32%) microcephaly. Disproportionately
small cerebella were seen only in moderate (13%) and severe (9%) microcephaly. As
genes are expressed at different times in cerebral and cerebellar development, it
is postulated that analysis of relative cerebellar and brain stem size may be useful
in the initial analysis of microcephaly by MR images both to categorize and to help
determine likely genetic causes.
Keywords
primary microcephaly - cerebellar hypoplasia - pontocerebellar hypoplasia