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Cerebellar atrophy is precisely a neuroimaging finding that is common in certain genetic disorders and neurodegenerative disorders. For patients with cerebellar atrophy, common symptoms include ataxia, language dysfunction, eye movement disorders, muscle dysfunction, etc.
1. Ataxia: decreased body coordination, symptoms such as unsteady standing, swaying walking, slightly stretched legs or scissor steps, and at the same time, unable to maintain balance, and irregular writing;
2. Language dysfunction: mainly due to the symptoms of ataxia of the lips, tongue, throat and other muscles, generally manifested as poetry-like speech, slurred speech, slow speech, pronunciation collision, etc.;
3. Ocular motility disorder: mainly eye muscle motility disorder, which will cause the left and right swing of the eyeball;
4. Muscle dysfunction: mainly due to decreased muscle tone, easy to choke when eating or drinking;
5. Others: Some cases are combined with cognitive impairment and movement disorders, such as senile dementia and spinocerebellar ataxia.
If the cerebellar atrophy is found by imaging examination, and there are the above symptoms, it is recommended to go to the neurology department in time to see a doctor, use drugs to treat the symptoms, and if the symptoms are severe, you need to cooperate with the training. In addition, it is necessary to quit smoking and alcohol, develop good eating habits, and avoid using drugs that are harmful to brain tissue to avoid aggravating symptoms.
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Cerebellar atrophy may cause balance dysfunction and fine motor atrophy, and the symptoms are characterized by the following:
1. Dysfunction of speech: speech is not as fluent as normal people, there is a very good description, called poetic language or explosive language, like the curtain or speech with singing a poem, there will be problems in speech;
2. Limb tremor: The involuntary shaking of the hand is not much different from Parkinson's trembling, and cerebellar atrophy is shaking when holding something, which is a kind of intentional tremor;
3. Unsteady walking: Walking is different from normal people, a bit like the gait of a drunk, upside down, the legs are relatively open to walk, and there is no way to walk on the field path or path;
4. Dysphagia: swallowing dysfunction will be combined in the later stage;
5. Blurred vision: blurred vision, double vision, sometimes involuntary shaking of the eyeballs.
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The clinical manifestations of cerebellar atrophy are as follows:
1. Daily behaviors are manifested as slow autonomous life, cerebellar gait, unsteady standing, wide stride, poor speech, dysphagia, dysarthria, difficulty walking in a straight line, nystagmus, inaccurate vision, and inability to finger and nose, which means that the nose cannot be accurately pointed out when the eyes are closed.
2. Inconvenience in life, manifested as difficulty in defecation, decreased or disordered sexual function, and difficulty in perspiration.
3. Spontaneous sensation, manifested as dizziness, syncope, palpitations.
4. In clinical examination, hypotonia, rapid rotation test, difficulty in standing with eyes closed, heel knee and shin test, finger and nose test all showed positive signs.
5. Imaging examination, CT examination showed that the cerebellum texture was coarse and heavy, the volume was reduced, the superior cerebellar sulcus was wide, the fourth ventricle was enlarged, and the cerebellar vermis was atrophied.
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Cerebellar atrophy is a degenerative disease that occurs in older people, and the most common symptom of patients is unsteady gait, which can also be manifested by drunken posture or scissor gait. Some patients may also experience dizziness, unresponsiveness, memory loss, and cranial nerve dysfunction such as tremor. Some patients will have dysarthria, cognitive impairment and other conditions, such as slurred speech, frequent forgetfulness, loss, and even eye swing left and right, and patients in the advanced stage may also have the situation of being unable to take care of themselves.
The common clinical manifestations of cerebellar atrophy mainly include the supply disorder of the lower limbs, which is manifested as shaky walking, very easy to fall like drunkenness, and the gait is also relatively wide, in addition to the symptoms of ataxia of the upper limbs, manifested as double clumsiness, tremor of the hands, unsteady fingers and noses, etc., and there will be slurred speech, blasting-like languageThere are many reasons for cerebellar atrophy, such as cerebrovascular disease or hereditary cerebellar ataxia, or some trauma to the cerebellum may lead to cerebellar atrophy.
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Children with cerebral atrophy are more manic, unsteady on their feet, trembling hands and feet, staggering, unable to walk in a straight line, and urinary incontinence, and it is not easy to judge the condition based on symptoms alone. The early symptoms of cerebral palsy in children are not easy to detect. Brain magnetic resonance imaging is done and a definitive diagnosis is made.
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2. Language disorder: Cerebellar atrophy causes these nerves that were originally affected, long-term ischemia, hypoxia, and blood supply disorders in the innervation area, resulting in damage to the central language system, so that the patient has a poetic language, which is manifested as slow language, articulation conflict, monotony, nasal voice, etc.
3. Eye movement disorders: Extraocular muscle movement disorders in patients, which is one of the main symptoms of cerebellar atrophy, mainly manifested as coarse nystagmus in both eyes, downbeat nystagmus and so on in surgical patients. Because of cerebellar atrophy, the central nervous system is severely damaged, affecting the nerve nucleus and the production of adjacent nerves.
4. Dystonia: Hypotonia is common in acute cerebellar hemisphere lesions, and chronic disease identification is generally not common, but some patients with cerebellar atrophy can have a gradual increase in systemic muscle tone, tremor, paralysis and other symptoms.
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Cerebellar atrophy is an imaging manifestation found by CT or MRI of the brain, indicating that the cerebellum has degenerative diseases, which can be seen in some hereditary diseases, degenerative diseases, some acute diseases and drug poisoning, etc., and may also be caused by natural aging. A common feature of cerebellar atrophy is neuroimaging, which reveals a decrease in the volume of the cerebellum and a deepening, widening of the sulci. In terms of symptoms, it is mainly a decrease in the function of the cerebellum physiological function, which is mainly to maintain body balance and coordinate voluntary movements.
Cerebellar atrophy is characterized by ataxia, cerebellar dysarthria, ocular motility disorders, hypotonia, non-motor manifestations, and cognitive and language dysfunction. Cerebellar neurological dysfunction may include dizziness, memory loss, language disorders including cerebellar mout, and accompanying symptoms include urinary disorders and orthostatic hypotension.
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Cerebellar atrophy may cause dizziness, nystagmus, and ataxia, which can be compensated for slowly over time, that is, it can be recovered through a self-regulation.
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Cerebellar atrophy presents primarily with ataxia, cerebellar dysarthria, ocular motility disorders, hypotonia, nonmotor manifestations, and cognitive and language dysfunction.
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The cerebellum is the auxiliary motor center of the human body, which has the role of precision, coordination and gait stability in controlling movements. Symptoms of cerebellar atrophy include: 1. Unsteady walking
Drunken gait, swaying from side to side; 2. Decreased fine motor function: deviations in fine motor such as writing, holding chopsticks, etc.; 3. Language dysfunction: poetic language, manifested as slow speech; 4. Eye movement disorders:
Manifested as binocular tremor, vertigo, etc.
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The symptoms of cerebellar atrophy are as follows:
1. Ataxia, manifested as unsteady standing, shaking, difficulty standing on the feet, generally unable to stand on one leg, staggering gait, walking with the legs far apart, swaying from side to side;
2. Cerebellar dysarthria, with poetry-like language;
3. Ocular motility disorder, manifested as divergence disorder, that is, extraocular muscle movement disorder;
4. Hypotonia, mainly seen in acute cerebellar hemisphere lesions;
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The tongue is numb and the brain is unresponsive. Blurred memory. Do things upside down. Difficulty walking or talking.
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The physiological function of the cerebellum is mainly to maintain body balance and coordinate voluntary movements, and cerebellar atrophy is mainly manifested by ataxia, cerebellar dysarthria, eye movement disorders, hypotonia, non-motor manifestations, and cognitive and language dysfunction.
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Slow reflexes, slow speech and unresponsiveness. Poor memory. That's right.
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Cerebellar atrophy is characterized by ataxia, unsteady gait, slurred speech, and often cognitive dysfunction. In the early stage of cerebellar atrophy symptoms, memory loss generally occurs, and there may also be unsteady walking and drooling when eating.
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If the cerebellum is atrophied, it will make people unsteady in walking, or even sitting unsteadily, and there will be changes in speech and intonation.
Cerebellar atrophy is part of a number of diseases, such as hereditary diseases, degenerative diseases. Therefore, if cerebellar atrophy occurs, you should go to the hospital as soon as possible to see if there are other accompanying symptoms, whether there may be other hereditary diseases or degenerative diseases.
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The main manifestations of cerebellar atrophy are as follows:
1. Abnormal posture and gait: This kind of patient generally walks from side to side, like drunk. If it is a supracerebellar vermisite lesion, you can also lean forward when walking.
If the lower vermisite is damaged, walk backwards. If the left cerebellar hemisphere is damaged, it falls to the left side when walking, and if the right cerebellar hemisphere is damaged, it falls to the right;
2. Poor fine motor coordination: manifested as poor distance discrimination, such as holding a water cup can not accurately reach the position of the water cup, and the action of buttoning and tying shoelaces is uncoordinated;
3. Intention tremor: refers to holding a water cup in your hand, the closer you get to the target, the more serious the hand tremor.
4. Nystagmus: manifested as back and forth shaking of the eyeball;
5. Language disorder: caused by articulatory organ ataxia, the most typical clinical manifestation is poetry-like language or explosive language, speaking as if reading Tang and Song poems, very subdued and frustrated;
6. Hypotonia: The arms and legs are very soft, if the ligaments under the knee are knocked with a small hammer, the normal legs swing back and forth 2-3 times to stop, and the patient can swing back and forth, that is, the muscle tone is reduced.
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Cerebellar atrophy may lead to speech or motor dysfunction, such as slurred speech, inability to walk normally in the legs, memory loss, etc.
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What are the symptoms of cerebellar atrophy? The main symptom is poor memory. When you forget about it after you finish talking, and then go out for a walk, sometimes you feel your legs. Don't listen to the truth. Don't listen to commands. Slow moving!
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Typical symptoms of cerebellar atrophy are ataxia, walking instability, facial palsy, cerebellar dysarthria, eye movement disorders, hypotonia, and cognitive and language dysfunction.
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The most typical symptom of cerebral atrophy is forgetfulness, and in the end, even one's relatives are not recognized.
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ataxia: the main symptom of cerebellar atrophy, gait instability is the most common presenting symptom, manifested by drunkenness or scissor gait; Patients with advanced disease may not be able to walk and need to stay in bed for long periods of time.
Cranial nerve dysfunction: dizziness, forgetfulness, memory loss, dullness, slowness, tremor of the hands and feet.
Dysarthria. Slurred speech, which may manifest as explosive speech or poetic speech.
Cognitive impairment: forgetfulness, loss; Inability to understand what others are saying; Patients with advanced disease may not be able to take care of themselves.
Nystagmus. The patient has eyeball swings from side to side.
Cerebellar atrophy is a degenerative disease of the nervous system and is a common type of multiple system atrophy. It is generally seen in elderly patients, with chronic onset and insidious progressive worsening of the course of the disease, with dizziness and ataxia as the main manifestations. Dizziness can be episodic or persistent, sometimes accompanied by visual rotation, and in severe cases, nausea and vomiting. >>>More
Patients with cerebellar atrophy often have very serious symptoms in the later stage, and there will be cerebellar dysfunction, which is mainly manifested by balance dysfunction and motor coordination dysfunction, and in the late stage, patients are often unable to stand up, and will fall to the side when they stand up, and patients need to be in a wheelchair for a long time. >>>More
The symptoms of cerebellar atrophy are divided into three stages: early, middle, and late. >>>More
The five main types of brain atrophy:
1. Hereditary cerebral atrophy. >>>More
There is no way to do this disease, only to maintain and improve the way of nourishing the nerves, so as long as it avoids further deterioration, it should still be of some help, and it can also be adjusted through some ways of training.