Chronic left cerebellar infarct symptoms
[DOC File]Stroke in the U - Logan Class of December 2011
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If symptoms are persistent or severe, a general medical examination with emphasis on myocardial infarction, hypertension, and diabetes is indicated. A neurological examination with evaluation of cranial nerve and cerebellar function, and an ophthalmologic examination of the vision and oculomotor nuclei should be performed.
[DOC File]A patient displays the following constellation of symptoms ...
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In this patient, the infarct is represented by the area of high signal intensity (white area) on the left side. Symptoms are variable, but will frequently include vertigo, nausea, vomiting, tinnitus, ipsilateral Horner’s syndrome and even sudden deafness.
[DOC File]Anatomy and Pathology of the Cerebellar Peduncle
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Ipsilateral cerebellar signs: nystagmus, dysarthria, limb ataxia (cerebellum) Cerebellar hemisphere infarct. Sudden onset of severe vertigo, nausea + other cerebellar signs. May have isolated nausea as well. Cerebellar hemorrhage. Sudden onset of severe vertigo, N/V and headache. This patient looks sick with dysmetria, true ataxia.
[DOC File]C&P Service Clinician's Guide - Veterans Affairs
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Morphologic CSF analysis Hochberg (unpublished data) 60/M Seizures with visual hallucinations, cognitive decline, cerebellar ataxia, hiccoughs, diplopia; cogwheel rigidity in right arm, right Babinski sign Not reported Not reported Punctate and coalescent white matter changes (T2 hyperintense) of both cerebellar hemispheres, left ventral pons ...
[DOC File]Vertigo and the Dizzy Patient - Calgary Em
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B. paralysis of the muscles of facial expression on the left side of the . face. C. dysmetria. D. limb and gait ataxia on the left side of the body. * E. spastic paralysis on the right side of the body. 34. The area of infarct was most likely due to an occlusion of * A. the anterior inferior cerebellar artery. B. the superior cerebellar artery.
Cerebellar infarction | Radiology Reference Article | Radiopaedia.org
Figure 2. An infarct in the inferior cerebellar peduncle. 72-year-old man with vertigo. A, B. FLAIR image and DWI show a hyperintense lesion, representing a small acute infarct in the left inferior cerebellar peduncle. Figure 3. An infarct in the inferior cerebellar peduncle. 57 …
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