Cerebellar stroke

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Clinical Features

  • Sudden inability to walk is common finding
  • May have additional signs of of Posterior Circulation Stroke- 5Ds: Dizziness (Vertigo), Dysarthria, Dystaxia, Diplopia, Dysphagia
  • Can be confused w/ acute vestibular syndrome (e.g. labyrinthitis)

Exam

  • HINTS Exam can reliably distinguish the two (more effective than early DWI MRI)
    • 1. Head Impulse Testing
      • Tests vestibulo-ocular reflex
      • Have pt fix their eyes on your nose
      • Move their head in the horizontal plane to the left and right
      • If reflex is intact their eyes will stay fixed on your nose
      • If reflex is abnormal eyes will move with their head and won't stay fixed on your nose
      • It is reassuring if the reflex is abnormal!(due to dysfunction of the nerve)
    • 2. Nystagmus
      • Benign nystagmus only beats in one direction no matter which direction their eyes look
      • Central nystagmus beats in multiple directions, is less likely to fatigue, and should be reproducible
        • If pt looks left, get left nystagmus, if looks right, get right-beating nystagmus
    • 3. Test of Skew
      • Vertical dysconjugate gaze is bad
      • Alternating cover test
        • Have pt look at your nose w/ their eyes and then cover one eye
          • When rapidly uncover the eye look to see if the eye quickly moves to re-align
    • If any of the above 3 tests are consistent w/ CVA obtain full work-up (including MRI)

Work-Up

  1. Bedside glucose
  2. Bedside Hb (polycythemia)
  3. CBC
  4. Chemistry
  5. Coags
  6. Troponin
  7. ECG (esp A-fib)
  8. Head CT
    1. Primarily used to exclude intracranial bleeding, abscess, tumor, other stroke mimics
  9. Also consider:
    1. Pregnancy test
    2. CXR (if infection suspected)
    3. UA (if infection suspected)
    4. Utox (if ingestion suspected

Treatment

Source

  1. Lewandowski C, Santhakumar S. Posterior Circulation Stroke. Foundation for Education and Research in Neurologic Emergencies (FERNE). Review Article.

See Also