The cerebral findings at magnetic resonance imaging in 67 transferase-deficient galactosemic patients (36 female, 31 male; median age, 10 years) are reported. Twenty-two patients had mild cerebral atrophy, eight had cerebellar atrophy, and 11 had multiple small hyperintense lesions in the cerebral white matter on T2-weighted images. The classic galactosemic patients (those without measurable transferase activity) older than 1 year of age did not show the normal dropoff in peripheral white matter signal intensity on intermediate- and T2-weighted images. The authors postulate that this abnormal signal intensity is due to altered myelin formation secondary to the inability to make sufficient and/or normal galactocerebroside.