A Large Cerebellar Infarction Case Who Presented with Transient Nonspecific Symptoms
Authors
Abstract:
Background: The cerebellum is the most important portion of the brain, which audits our acts and establishes balance. Symptoms from a cerebellar stroke happen suddenly. In addition to specific cerebellar signs and symptoms, other common symptoms of a cerebral stroke include dizziness, headache, nausea, vomiting, double vision, tremor, and vertigo. These symptoms can be confused with other situations because they are nonspecific. In many cases, these symptoms are ignored. Clinical Presentation and Intervention: Here, we report a case of an apparent healthy middle-aged man with a large hemispheric cerebellar infarction presented just with a new onset headache and transient mild and nonspecific symptoms including mild left side ptosis and relatively impaired tandem gait which resolved rapidly without obvious and permanent neurological problems. Conclusion: Nonspecific symptoms should alert physicians to examine unusual manifestations of cerebellar infarction, which might be missed if they do not suspect it and do not examine accurately.
similar resources
brain tuberculoma: report of a case presented with prolonged nonspecific symptoms and multiple brain tuberculoma.
#no abstract#
full textBrain tuberculoma: Report of a case presented with prolonged nonspecific symptoms and multiple brain tuberculoma
Five decades of tuberculosis control programs using potentially effective medications have been unsuccessful in diminishing the prevalence of the infection in most parts of the world and tuberculosis continues to kill all age groups.1 Tuberculosis may manifest with atypical clinical manifestations and delayed diagnosis may give rise to unexpected grave outcomes. As a result, high degree of clin...
full textEcmo in a diabetic patient with cerebellar infarction and ARDS- A case report
Background: Extra corporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) has been considered as a crucial modality for the management of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Since ECMO is considered to be an invasive modality and may be associated with some complications, there are strict indications for its use. Here we report successful treatment of a case of severe ARDS with Veno-Venous ECMO. Case pre...
full textO 21: A Case of Anti-NMDA Receptor Encephalitis Who Presented with Status Epilepticus
Anti-N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (anti-NMDAR) encephalitis is is most common form ofimmune-mediated encephalitis with prominent neurologic and psychiatric features at disease onset. We describe a 16 years old patient who presented with fever and status epilepticus. His MRI sequences was normal. Anti-NMDAR antibodies were detected in the CSF. MRI, CT and other studies didn,t show any tum...
full textSilent Myocardial Infarction Presented with Homonymous Hemianopia: A Rare Case Study
Silent myocardial infarction is a little-known phenomenon, the mechanisms of which have still remained unclear. Herein, we presented the case of a middle-aged man suffering from silent myocardial infarction who presented with homonymous hemianopia and no other major cardiovascular risk factors, except for stage 1 hypertension.
full textA Case of Medullary Infarction Presented Initial Symptoms Similar to Meniere’s Disease
Fluctuating hearing loss and vertigo are the typical presentations of Meniere's disease. However, it is unusual that fluctuating hearing loss and vertigo are caused by vertebral artery occlusion or cerebral infarction. Here, we described the case of a 54-year-old male patient with hypertension and diabetes mellitus who presented with fluctuating hearing loss in his left ear and severe whirling-...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 5 issue 2
pages 101- 104
publication date 2019-05
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023