A13. Examination of the cerebellar symptoms
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- Symptoms manifest on the same side as the lesion
- Cerebellar ataxia
- Gait ataxia
- Wide-based, unsteady gait
- Similar to the gait of drunk people
- Observe patient’s gait
- Observe whether the gait worsens or stays the same when patient closes their eyes
- Worsening with eyes closed suggest sensory ataxia
- Cerebellar gait ataxia does not worsen with closed eyes
- Negative/inconclusive Romberg test
- Positive Unterberger test (topic 6)
- Limb ataxia
- = uncoordinated movement of the limbs
- Finger-to-nose test usually positive
- Heel-to-shin test
- Procedure
- Ask patient to lie flat on their back
- Ask them to place one heel on the opposite knee, and then move the heel smoothly down the shin to the ankle
- Repeat on the opposite side
- Negative:
- Patient can perform the movement smoothly
- Positive:
- Patient is unable to perform the movement smoothly. Tremors appear
- Procedure
- Trunk ataxia
- = inability to sit or stand upright without support
- Positive Romberg test (topic 6)
- Gait ataxia
- Dysmetria
- = overshooting or undershooting the intended movement
- Finger-to-nose test
- Procedure
- Hold your finger out in front of the patient
- Ask the patient to touch their nose, then your finger
- Repeat this movement as you move your finger to new positions
- Negative:
- Patient can do movement normally, touching your finger every time
- Positive:
- Patient will miss your finger due to constantly overshooting or undershooting the precise movements
- Procedure
- Dysdiadochokinesia
- = alternating antagonistic movements are irregular, uncoordinated
- Ask patient to perform quick, alternating movements
- Touching thumb and index finger and spreading them again, repeatedly
- Clenching and opening the fist repeatedly
- Pronating and supinating the hand repeatedly
- Dorsiflex and plantarflex the foot repeatedly
- Observe for irregularity and uncoordinated movements
- Dysarthria
- = scanning speech
- Words are broken down into separate syllables
- See topic 16
- Intention tremor
- = broad, coarse, slow tremor which occurs during purposeful movement
- Tremor is at its worst right before reaching the target
- Observed during finger-to-nose test
- See also topic 33
- Examination of nystagmus
- Try to provoke nystagmus by eliciting ocular movements
- Does the patient have nystagmus?
- Describe the type of the nystagmus
- Horizontal/vertical/rotatory/combined
- Which direction is the nystagmus?
- The direction is named after the fast component
- The nystagmus is directed toward the side of the lesion
- Does visually fixating the gaze suppress the nystagmus?
- Fixation does not improve nystagmus of cerebellar origin
- See also topic 30