“…The "face of giant panda" sign characterized by hypointensity in the red nucleus and substantia nigra surrounded by hyperintensity in the midbrain is known to be characteristic of patients with Wilson's disease, although it is only rarely seen [96,97]. Hyperintensity on T2WI is observed in putamen (72 %), caudate (61 %), thalami (58 %), midbrain (49 %), pons (20 %), cerebral white matter (25 %), cortex (9 %), medulla (12 %), and cerebellum (10 %) [96], but these signal changes are the opposite to those produced by the paramagnetic effect of copper. The cause of this hyperintensity on T2WI is unclear, but edema, gliosis, neuronal necrosis, and cystic degeneration due to copper toxicity have all been proposed.…”