Abstract

A 7-year-old boy underwent resection of a posterior fossa medulloblastoma. Two days later, he developed facial diplegia, left abducens nerve palsy, and mild hypalgesia below the neck. MRI documented 2 dot-like ischemic foci in the pons (figure). We diagnosed the unusual bilateral occurrence of Gasperini syndrome, a lesion of the sixth and seventh cranial nerve nuclei and the lateral spinothalamic tract that produces ipsilateral cranial nerve palsies with contralateral hemisensory deficits.1 We hypothesized a mechanism of postoperative spasm of long circumferential branches of the basilar artery. This mechanism should be considered in cases of postoperative neurologic deficits with delayed onset.2

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