Amarenco P
Service de Neurologie, Hôpital Saint-Antoine, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France.
Rev Neurol (Paris). 1993;149(11):728-48.
Cerebellar infarcts have been neglected for a long time and are now shown well by CT and especially MRI. Some infarcts involve the full territory supplied by a cerebellar artery. They are frequently complicated by edema with brain stem compression and supratentorial hydrocephalus, requiring at times emergency surgery, and are often accompanied by other medullary, medial pontine, mesencephalic, thalamic and occipital infarcts. On the other hand, partial territory infarcts are usually confined to the cerebellum and have a benign outcome with total recovery or minimal disability. They are more common than full territory infarcts. However, clinical presentations are similar to those full territory infarcts, differing mainly by the lack of drowsiness or unconsciousness. The main symptoms are vertigo, headache, vomiting, unsteadiness of gait and dysarthria. Signs include ipsilateral limb dysmetria, ipsilateral axial lateropulsion, ataxia and dysarthria. Vertigo is more severe and rotary in posterior inferior cerebellar artery territory infarcts, whereas dysarthria and ataxia are prominent in superior cerebellar artery territory infarcts. A few brain stem signs are sometimes added. In these territorial cerebellar infarcts, cardioembolism is the most common cause. Atherosclerotic occlusion comes next, involving the intracranial part of the vertebral artery and, less frequently, the lower basilar artery, both locations inaccessible to surgery. Other causes are artery to artery embolism from a vertebral artery origin stenosis, or the aortic arch, in situ intracranial branch atherosclerotic occlusion, and vertebral artery dissection. Border zone cerebellar infarcts occur in one third of the cases. They are small cortical or deep infarcts. They have the same symptoms and signs as territorial infarcts except for more frequent postural symptoms occurring over days, weeks or months after the ischemic event. The infarcts mainly have a thromboembolic mechanism, and sometimes have a hemodynamic mechanism: 1) focal cerebellar hypoperfusion due to large artery occlusive disease in more than half the cases, 2) small or end (pial) artery disease due to hypercoagulable state (thrombocythemia, polycythemia, hypereosinophilia, disseminated intravascular coagulation), arteritis or intracranial atheroma, and 3) rarely systemic hypotension due to cardiac arrest.
小脑梗死长期以来一直被忽视,现在CT尤其是MRI能很好地显示它们。一些梗死累及小脑动脉供应的全部区域。它们常因水肿并发脑干受压和幕上脑积水,有时需要紧急手术,并且常伴有其他延髓、脑桥内侧、中脑、丘脑和枕叶梗死。另一方面,部分区域梗死通常局限于小脑,预后良好,可完全恢复或仅有轻微残疾。它们比全区域梗死更常见。然而,其临床表现与全区域梗死相似,主要区别在于没有嗜睡或昏迷。主要症状为眩晕、头痛、呕吐、步态不稳和构音障碍。体征包括同侧肢体辨距不良、同侧轴向侧推、共济失调和构音障碍。眩晕在小脑后下动脉区域梗死中更严重且呈旋转性,而构音障碍和共济失调在小脑上动脉区域梗死中更为突出。有时还会出现一些脑干体征。在这些小脑区域梗死中,心源性栓塞是最常见的原因。其次是动脉粥样硬化闭塞,累及椎动脉颅内段,较少累及基底动脉下段,这两个部位手术难以到达。其他原因包括椎动脉起始部狭窄或主动脉弓的动脉到动脉栓塞、原位颅内分支动脉粥样硬化闭塞以及椎动脉夹层。边缘带小脑梗死占病例的三分之一。它们是小的皮质或深部梗死。除了在缺血事件数天、数周或数月后更频繁出现姿势性症状外,它们具有与区域梗死相同的症状和体征。这些梗死主要有血栓栓塞机制,有时还有血流动力学机制:1)超过一半的病例因大动脉闭塞性疾病导致局部小脑灌注不足,2)因高凝状态(血小板增多症、红细胞增多症、嗜酸性粒细胞增多症、弥散性血管内凝血)、动脉炎或颅内动脉粥样硬化导致小动脉或终末(软脑膜)动脉疾病,3)很少因心脏骤停导致全身性低血压。