Case Report
Hemangioblastomas occur both sporadically and as an important component of von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) disease. The typical MRI features of hemangioblastoma are cysts with enhanced cystic wall nodules in the cerebellum or lesions with uniform enhancement on the surface or inside the spinal cord. If there is edema around hemangioblastoma, it is easy to be misdiagnosed as brain metastasis on MRI./r/nA 41-year-old male patient was found to have a lump in the pancreas during a health examination 3 months ago. Subsequently, the patient underwent surgical treatment. The postoperative pathology suggests that the pancreatic lesion is a neuroendocrine tumor. The patient subsequently came to our hospital for consultation on further treatment plans. Abnormal signals were found in the right cerebellum during pituitary magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) before the development of a treatment plan for neuroendocrine tumors. Subsequently, the patient underwent cerebellar mass resection surgery. The pathological result after the surgery was hemangioblastoma./r/nThe patient underwent surgery to remove the tumor and was diagnosed with hemangioblastoma by pathological examination. Subsequently, the patient’s genetic testing results confirmed the diagnosis of VHL syndrome./r/nThe patient underwent cerebellar mass resection surgery./r/nThe patient recovered after surgical resection./r/nIn this report, we emphasize the atypical MRI manifestations of hemangioblastoma. For patients with VHL syndrome-related hemangioblastoma, genetic testing is necessary for the patient and their family members.