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What happens when you have a stroke in your cerebellum?

What happens when you have a stroke in your cerebellum?

If left untreated, a cerebellar stroke can cause your brain to swell or bleed. These complications can lead to further damage to your cerebellum and other areas of your brain. If a cerebellar stroke affects your brain stem, your breathing, heartbeat, and blood pressure could also be affected.

What is a pica stroke?

The Posterior Inferior Cerebellar Artery (PICA) carries blood to this part of the brain. This stroke (Wallenberg’s Syndrome) causes the person to have balance problems and lean to one side. They may also have numbness on one side of the face and body and an eye droop. They may have hoarseness and trouble swallowing.

What is a cerebellar stroke?

A cerebellar infarct (or cerebellar stroke) is a type of cerebrovascular event involving the posterior cranial fossa, specifically the cerebellum. Impaired perfusion reduces oxygen delivery and causes deficits in motor and balance control.

How do you recover from a cerebellar stroke?

Most people who experience a cerebellar stroke improve, but this may take time. Physical therapy is a cornerstone of recovery, particularly when it comes to regaining balance and learning how to walk safely. 7 Over time, tremors and jerking movements may improve.

What are the symptoms of posterior cerebral stroke?

Patients with posterior cerebral artery (PCA) infarcts present for neurologic evaluation with symptoms including the following:

  • Acute vision loss.
  • Confusion.
  • New onset posterior cranium headache.
  • Paresthesias.
  • Limb weakness.
  • Dizziness.
  • Nausea.
  • Memory loss.

Can a person survive a brain stem stroke?

Recovery is possible. Because brain stem strokes do not usually affect language ability, the patient is often able to participate more fully in rehabilitation. Double vision and vertigo usually resolve after several weeks of recovery in mild to moderate brain stem strokes.

What happens when posterior cerebral artery is blocked?

Symptoms of posterior cerebral artery stroke include contralateral homonymous hemianopia (due to occipital infarction), hemisensory loss (due to thalamic infarction) and hemi-body pain (usually burning in nature and due to thalamic infarction) 3. If bilateral, often there is reduced visual-motor coordination 3.

What is the purpose of posterior fossa decompression?

A posterior fossa decompression procedure is performed to relieve pressure at the base of the brain. It is used for the treatment and management of cerebellar strokes, bleeds, tumours and Chiari malformation.

What to look for after a posterior fossa stroke?

Post stroke considerations for the posterior fossa. Patients should be clinically monitored for signs of increased intracranial pressure such as headache, vomiting, lethargy, disorientation, or neurologic deterioration, as well as evidence of hypertension, bradycardia, or irregular respiratory pattern.

Is there a brain tumor in the posterior fossa?

Posterior fossa syndrome, or cerebellar mutism, is a condition that sometimes develops after surgery to remove a brain tumor in the posterior fossa region of the brain. The posterior fossa is a space near the base of the skull that contains the cerebellum and brain stem.

What are the causes of posterior fossa syndrome?

Researchers are actively studying causes, symptoms, care, and outcomes. Injury to the nerve pathways that travel back and forth from the cerebellum to the cerebral cortex (dentate nucleus and superior cerebellar peduncles) is likely the main contributor to the development of posterior fossa syndrome.

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Ruth Doyle