Skip to main content
AkademIndex

Products

For developers

AkademBasesoonOpen API for the ecosystem
Latin
English
Article

Isolated unilateral infarction of the cerebellar tonsil: Ocular motor findings

Seung‐Han LeeDepartment of Neurology Chonnam National University Medical School Gwangju South KoreaSeong‐Ho ParkDepartment of Neurology Seoul National University College Medicine, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital Seongnam South KoreaJi‐Soo KimDepartment of Neurology Seoul National University College Medicine, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital Seongnam South KoreaHyo‐Jung KimBiomedical Research Institute Seoul National University Bundang Hospital Seongnam South KoreaF. YunusovDepartment of Neurology Seoul National University College Medicine, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital Seongnam South KoreaDavid S. ZeeDepartment of Neurology, Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, Neuroscience, and Ophthalmology Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Baltimore MD
Annals of Neurologyjournal2014en
ABI

Abstract

The oculomotor abnormalities with isolated infarction of the cerebellar tonsil are unknown. In a patient with acute infarction of the right tonsil, we found (1) nearly completely abolished ipsilateral smooth pursuit and impaired contralateral pursuit, (2) a low-amplitude ipsilesional right-beating nystagmus without fixation, (3) gaze-holding deficits, and (4) normal vestibulo-ocular reflex. These findings contrast with striking vestibular abnormalities reported with unilateral flocculus and anterior tonsil infarction. Taken together, these findings allow more diagnostic certainty in cerebellar patients, help resolve controversies about interpretation of experimental findings in monkeys, and clarify homologies between the monkey and human cerebellum.

Topics

Identifiers

Citations and references

Cited by 015 references
Metrics — AkademScholar · Coming soon