Title: The%20Cerebellum
1The Cerebellum
2Objectives
- To be knowledgeable about the aspects of the
neurological examination pertaining to the
cerebellum - To understand how to localize lesions within the
cerebellum on the basis of clinical findings - To develop a framework about the presentation of
nervous system illness
3Cerebellar Examination
- Midline cerebellar function
- Cerebellar hemispheric function
4Clinical localization in the cerebellum
- For purpose of localization, cerebellum can be
viewed as a saggitally-oriented structure
containing 3 zones on each side - Midline
- Intermediate
- Lateral
5- Midline zone
- Consists of the anterior and posterior parts of
the vermis, fastigial nucleus and associated
input and output projections - concerned with posture, locomotion, position of
head relative to trunk, control of EOMs - Cerebellar signs resulting from midline
cerebellar disease - disorders of stance/gait, truncal postural
disturbances, rotated postures of the head,
disturbances of eye movements
6- Intermediate zone
- Consists of paravermal region of cerebellum and
interposed nuclei (emboliform, globose) - concerned with control of velocity, force and
pattern of muscle activity - Clinical disorders related to disease of this
zone not clearly delineated
7- Lateral zone
- cerebellar hemisphere and dentate nucleus on each
side - concerned with the planning of movement in
connection with neurons in the Rolandic region of
the cerebral cortex (fine, skilled) - Lesions result in abnormalities of skilled
voluntary movements hypotonia, dysarthria,
dysmetria, dysdiadochokinesia, excessive rebound,
impaired check, kinetic and static tremors,
past-pointing
8Midline Cerebellar Function
- Observation
- Posture, head position
- Gait
- Eye movements
- Rhomberg Test
- Tests of gait- tandem, toe heel walking,
walking backward - Hop on each foot
9Cerebellar Hemispheric Function
- Finger-to-nose test
- Rapidly alternating movements
- Heel-to-shin test
10Cardinal Features of Cerebellar Dysfunction
- Hypotonia
- Ataxia
- Dysarthria
- Tremor
- Ocular Motor Dysfunction
11Classic signs of cerebellar damage
- Depending on extent, an individual may have one
symptom or a combination - In all cases, symptoms from unilateral damage
appear on the side ipsilateral to the injury - Ascending spinocerebellar pathways are uncrossed
and descending corticoopontocerebellar fibers are
crossed thus motor deficits from cerebellar
damage are ipsilateral to the lesion whereas
motor deficits from damage to motor areas of the
cerebral cortex are contralateral to the lesion
12- postural instability
- delayed initiation and termination of motor
actions - inability to perform continuous, repetitive
movements - errors in smoothness and direction of a movement
- lack of coordingation or synergy of movement,
especially complex movements - lack of motor plasticity or learning
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14Hypotonia
- usually accompanies acute hemispheric lesions
- Interestingly less often seen in chronic lesions
- Ispilateral to the side of a cerebellar lesion
- More noticeable in upper limbs and proximal
muscles - (beware of increased tone with a cerebellar
lesionmay reflect compression of
brainstem/corticospinal tracts)!! - Probably due to ? fusimotor activity, secondary
to cerebellar injury (especially the dentate),
with a ? response to stretch in muscle spindle
afferents
15Ataxia
- Defective timing of sequential contraction of
agonist /antagonist muscles - Results in a disturbance in smooth performance of
voluntary acts (errors in rate, range, force,
duration) - Without cerebellar modulation, skilled movements
originating in cerebral cortex are inaccurate,
poorly controlled - May affect limbs, trunk, gait (depends on part of
cerebellum involved) - usually persists despite visual cues (unlike
ataxia due to posterior column disease affecting
the spinal cord)
16- Asynergia lack of synergy of various muscles
while performing complex movements ( movements
are broken up into isolated, successive parts--
decomposition of movement) - Dysmetria abnormal excursions in movement
- Dysdiadochokinesia impaired performance of
rapidly alternating movement - Past-pointing
- Excessive rebound when an opposed motion is
suddenly released
17Cerebellar Dysarthria
- Abnormalities in articulation and prosody
(together or independent) - scanning, slurring, staccato, explosive,
hesitant, garbled - May result from a generalized hypotonia (disorder
of muscle spindle function) - Hemisphere lesions are associated with speech
disorders more often than vermal lesions
18Posterior Fossa Syndrome
- Acute, bilateral injury to both cerebellar
paravermal regions, including the dentate, may
lead to transient muteness - Seen in up to 20 of posterior fossa tumor
resections in children (cerebellar mutism
syndrome) - May last for several months, with severe
dysarthria after return of speech
19- Cerebellar affective disorder
- Impaired executive function, personality,
emotional and behavioral changes - Can be seen as part of the mutism syndrome
20Tremor
- rhythmic, alternating, or oscillatory movements
- can be a normal exaggeration of movement, a
primary disorder, or a symptom of a cerebellar
disorder or Parkinson's disease - Diagnosis is usually clinical
- Treatment varies by etiology
21Tremor- Framework/ Categories
- Trigger Resting or action-- includes postural
tremors and intention tremors (triggered by a
purposeful movement) - Cause Physiologic, essential, parkinsonism, or
secondary to drugs or other disorders (including
cerebellar disorders) - Amplitude of oscillation Fine or coarse
22Tremor- General features
- Resting tremor maximal at rest, decreases with
activity usually a symptom of Parkinson's
disease - Postural tremor maximal with limb in a fixed
position against gravity gradual onset suggests
physiologic or essential tremor acute onset
suggests toxic / metabolic disorder - Intention tremor maximal during movement toward
a target (finger-to-nose testing) suggests a
cerebellar disorder but may result from other
diseases (MS, Wilsons)
23Tremor- Physiologic
- Physiologic tremor present normally -- usually
so slight that it is noticeable only under
certain conditions predominantly postural,
fine and rapid (8 to 13 Hz) - most visible when hands are outstretched
- Amplitude may be increased (enhanced) by
- Anxiety
- Stress
- Fatigue
- Metabolic disorders (eg, hyperadrenergic states
such as alcohol or drug withdrawal or
thyrotoxicosis) - Certain drugs (eg, caffeine, other
phosphodiesterase inhibitors, ß-adrenergic
agonists, corticosteroids) - Alcohol and other sedatives usually suppress it
24Tremor- Essential tremor
- benign hereditary tremor, senile tremor
- coarse or fine, medium frequency (4 to 8 Hz)
min or absent at rest - usually bilateral
- can affect the hands, head, voice
- tends to increase with aging
- In 50 of patients, inheritance is autosomal
dominant - may be enhanced by any factor that enhances
physiologic tremor (not always required) - Some consider essential tremor a variant of
physiologic tremor
25Tremor- Cerebellar Disease
- an intention tremor no effective drug
available physical measures (eg, weighting the
affected limbs or teaching patients to brace the
proximal limb during activity) sometimes helps - Asterixis not a tremor muscle tone lapses
when wrist extension is attempted, resulting in
repetitive, nonrhythmic, non-oscillatory wrist
flexion a sign of chronic renal or liver
failure (differentiate from tremor) - 3-5 Hz
- Usually bilateral
- Can be a sign of hepatic encephalopathy
(inability of liver to metabolize ammonia to
urea) - Patient is usually drowsy or stuporous
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27Oculomotor dysfunction
- Nystagmus frequently seen in cerebellar disorders
- Gaze-evoked nystagmus, upbeat nystagmus, rebound
nystagmus, opticokinetic nystagmus may all be
seen in midline cerebellar lesions - Other ocular lesions seen include opsoclonus,
skew deviation, ocular bobbing - Most of the disorders giving rise to these affect
brainstem structures, too cerebellar role in
their onset not well-defined - Overall, most cerebellar eye signs cannot be
localized to specific areas of the cerebellum
28Features to Examine
29Gait
- Ataxia
- In cerebellar disease, the walk is
staggering/lurching/wavering - Not benefitted by patients view of his
surroundings - Lesion in mid-cerebellum movements are in all
directions - Lesion in lateral cerebellum staggering/falling
are toward the side of the lesion - Somewhat steadied by standing or walking on a
wide base - (ataxia secondary to vestibular disease may
appear similar)
30Gait
- Gait
- have patient walk across room under observation
- Watch for normal posture coordinated arm
movements - ask patient to walk heel-to-toe across room, walk
on toes to test for plantar flexion weakness, and
on heels to test for dorsiflexion weakness - Abnormalities in heel to toe walking ethanol
intoxication, weakness, poor position sense,
vertigo -- exclude before poor balance is
attributed to a cerebellar lesion - elderly patients have difficulty with tandem gait
(heel to toe walking) -- general neuronal loss
impairs combination of position sense, strength,
coordination
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32blumentandemgait
33blumenTipToeGaitandHopping
34impairedTandemGait.flv
35CerebGait.flv
36Testing of Station (equilibratory coordination)
- Position of Feet
- Ataxia from spinocerebellar disease is less when
the patient stands on a broad base (feet widely
apart) - Eyes open or closed
- Cerebellar ataxia is not improved by visual
orientation ataxia from posterior column disease
(disordered proprioception) is worsened with the
eyes closed - Direction of Falling
- Disease of lateral lobe of cerebellum causes
falling to ispilateral side - Lesions of midline/vermis cause indiscriminate
falling, depending on initial stance of the
patient
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38blumenRhombergTest
39Diadochokinesia
- Normal coordination includes ability to arrest
one motor impulse and substitute the opposite - Loss of this dysdiadochokinesia
- Characteristic of cerebellar disease
- Many simple tests for this
- Alternating movements (pronate and supinate
forearm hand quickly) in cerebellar disease,
movements overshoot, undershoot be irregular or
inaccurate - Rapidly tap fingers on table
- Open and close fists
- Stewart-Holmes rebound sign
40blumenFineFingerTap.rm
41blumenRapidlyAltMovements.rm
42dysdiadochokinesiamovie
43Dysmetria
- Finger to nose test
- With eyes open, have pt partially extend elbow
and rapidly bring tip of index finger in a wide
arc to tip of his nose - In cerebellar disease, the action may have an
intention tremor - With eyes closed, sense of position in the
shoulder and elbow is tested - Heel to Shin test
- Pt places one heel on opposite knee and slides
heel down the tibia with foot dorsiflexed - Movement should be performed accurately
- In cerebellar disease, the arc of the movement is
jerky/wavering - The slide down the shin has an action tremor
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46blumenFingerNoseTest.rm
47Coordinationwithpuppets.mp4
48Cerebellarintentiontremor.mp4
49Heelshintest.mp4
50Heelshinabnormal.mp4
51Checkreflexmovie.mp4
52Checkreflexabnorvideo.mp4
53Spasticspeech.flv
54Cerebellar Syndromes
- In general, precise clinical localization is
difficult in the cerebellum - Some syndromes can be classified anatomically
- Rostral vermis syndrome (anterior lobe)
- Caudal vermis syndrome (flocculonodular,
posterior lobe) - Hemispheric syndrome (posterior lobe, variably
anterior too) - Pancerebellar syndrome
55Cerebellar Syndromes- rostral vermis
- Wide-based stance and gait
- Ataxia of gait, proportionally little ataxia on
heel-shin with pt lying down - Normal or slightly impaired arm cooordination
- Infrequent hypotonia, nystagmus, dysarthria
- alcoholics (restricted form of cerebellar
cortical degeneration)
56Cerebellar Syndromes- caudal vermis
- Axial dysequilibrium, staggering gait
- Little or no limb ataxia
- Sometimes spontaneous nystagmus
- Rotated postures of head
- Seen in diseases that damage the flocculonodular
lobe (esp medulloblastoma in children)as tumor
grows, a hemispheric cerebellar syndrome may be
superimposed - Need to also consider other signs of ? ICP
(obstruction of CSF)
57Cerebellar Syndromes- hemispheric
- Incoordination of ipsilateral limb movements
- More noticeable with fine motor skills
- Incoordination affects most noticeably muscles
involved in speech and finger movements - Etiologies include infarcts, neoplasms, abscesses
58Cerebellar Syndromes- pancerebellar
- Combination of all the other syndromes
- Bilateral signs of cerebellar dysfunction
involving trunk, limbs, cranial musculature - Etiologies usually infectious/parainfectious
processes, hypoglycemia, paraneoplastic
disorders, toxic-metabolic disorders
59Cerebellum 4th ventricle
- The fourth ventricle is ventral to the cerebellum
- Anatomically and clinically important
- Mass lesions located in the cerebellum, or
swelling of the cerebellum (eg. Edema from an
infarct) can compress the 4th ventricle and
result in obstructive hydrocephalus
60My patient Tamra
- 15 yr, R-handed ? previously healthy from
Woodstock - 3 wk progressive gait unsteadiness, ataxia,
dizziness - 6 wk H/A, holocephalic, worse when coughing or
sneezing, 5/10, takes Advil - 20 lbs weight loss over 3 wks
- admitted to Woodstock General
- Dx Mono, D/C home,next day H/A 10/10
61- HR 76, RR 16, BP 135/76 mmHg, T-35.9
- Awake, alert, oriented x3, speech OK
- Pupils 4mm bilat., brisk, full EOM
- Nystagmus up lateral gaze
- Bilateral papilledema
- Symetrical facial features
- N bulk tone, full power arms legs 5/5
- Reflexes symmetric, Plantars equivocal
- Difficulty pointing bilat., dysmetric, past
pointing, heel to shin good - Broad based gait
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65Cerebellar dysarthria video clip
66Nystagmus video clip
67Finger to nose- Tamra
68Heel to shin- Tamra
69Lower extremity ataxia- Tamra
70Upper extremity ataxia- Tamra