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Cerebellar stroke
From WikEM
(Redirected from Cerebellar Stroke)
Contents
Background
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 with acute vestibular syndrome (e.g. labyrinthitis)
Central vs. Peripheral Causes of Vertigo
Peripheral | Central | |
Onset | Sudden | Sudden or slow |
Severity | Intense spinning | Ill defined, less intense |
Pattern | Paroxysmal, intermittent | Constant |
Aggravated by position/movement | Yes | Variable |
Nausea/diaphoresis | Frequent | Variable |
Nystagmus | Horizontal and unidirectional | Vertical and/or multidirectional |
Fatigue of symptoms/signs | Yes | No |
Hearing loss/tinnitus | May occur | Does not occur |
Abnormal tympanic membrane | May occur | Does not occur |
CNS symptoms/signs | Absent | Usually present |
Differential Diagnosis
Vertigo
- Vestibular/otologic
- Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV)
- Traumatic (following head injury)
- Infection
- Meniere's disease
- Ear foreign body
- Otic barotrauma
- Neurologic
- Cerebellar stroke
- Vertebrobasilar insufficiency
- Lateral Wallenberg syndrome
- Anterior inferior cerebellar artery syndrome
- Neoplastic: cerebellopontine angle tumors
- Basal ganglion diseases
- Vertebral Artery Disssection
- Multiple sclerosis
- Infections: neurosyphilis, tuberculosis
- Epilepsy
- Migraine (basilar)
- Other
- Hematologic: anemia, polycythemia, hyperviscosity syndrome
- Toxic
- Chronic renal failure
- Metabolic
Evaluation
Exam
Stroke Work-Up
- Labs
- POC glucose
- CBC
- Chemistry
- Coags
- Troponin
- T&S
- ECG
- In large ICH or stroke, may see deep TWI and prolong QT, occ ST changes
- Head CT (non-contrast)
- Also consider:
- CTA brain and neck (to check for large vessel occlusion for potential thrombectomy)
- Pregnancy test
- CXR (if infection suspected)
- UA (if infection suspected)
- Utox (if ingestion suspected)
MR Imaging (for Rule-Out CVA or TIA)
- MRI Brain with DWI (without contrast) AND
- Cervical vascular imaging (ACEP Level B in patients with high short-term risk for stroke):[4]
- MRA brain (without contrast) AND
- MRA neck (without contrast)
- May instead use Carotid CTA or US (Carotid US slightly less sensitive than MRA)[5] (ACEP Level C)
Management
- Early neurosurgical consultation is needed (herniation may lead to rapid deterioration)
- See Stroke (Main)
- See Thrombolysis in Acute Ischemic Stroke (tPA)
Disposition
- Admission
See Also
References
- ↑ Mullins ME, Schaefer PW, Sorensen AG, Halpern EF, Ay H, He J, Koroshetz WJ, Gonzalez RG. CT and conventional and diffusion-weighted MR imaging in acute stroke: study in 691 patients at presentation to the emergency department. Radiology. 2002 Aug;224(2):353-60.
- ↑ Suarez JI, Tarr RW, Selman WR. Aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. N Engl J Med. 2006; 354(4):387–396.
- ↑ Douglas VC, Johnston CM, Elkins J, et al. Head computed tomography findings predict short-term stroke risk after transient ischemic attack. Stroke. 2003;34:2894-2899.
- ↑ ACEP Clinical Policy: Suspected Transient Ischemic Attackfull text
- ↑ Nederkoorn PJ, Mali WP, Eikelboom BC, et al. Preoperative diagnosis of carotid artery stenosis. Accuracy of noninvasive testing. Stroke. 2002;33:2003-2008.