Ataxia DDx
Overview
Ataxia is impaired coordination in the absence of weakness. Acute ataxia is a neurological emergency, and vascular lesions of the cerebellum (infarction, hemorrhage) must be considered/ excluded.
Causes
Acute onset (minutes/ hours)
- cerebellar hemorrhage or infarction (particularly suspect this if hemiataxia or other brainstem signs)
- Intoxication with alcohol or drugs is perhaps the most common etiology (truncal/ gait, bilateral, altered mental state) e.g. alcohol, antiepileptics
- Migraine (basilar migraine variant can present with cerebellar ataxia and brainstem signs; headache may not be prominent)
- Post-traumatic/post-concussive
Subacute ataxia (hours/days)
- Infectious causes: most common in children
— viral cerebellitis, especially 2–10 years old (pyrexia, limb/gait ataxia, and dysarthria, with recovery over a period of weeks)
— Postinfectious encephalomyelitis, especially varicella. - Intoxication (see acute)
- Multiple sclerosis, consider this especially in young adults (history of relapse, other brainstem signs)
- Paraneoplastic syndromes (especially neuroblastoma in children and lung carcinoma in adults)
- Others
— Foramen magnum compression
— Hydrocephalus
— Labyrinthitis/vestibular neuritis ( vertigo, nausea, and vomiting are more prominent)
— Miller-Fisher variant of Guillain-Barré syndrome (ophthalmoplegia, ataxia, areflexia)
— Posterior fossa lesions (features of increased intracranial pressure)
— Post-concussion
Hereditary
- Autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA)
- Recessively inherited and X-linked ataxia
— ataxia telangiectasia
— Friedreich ataxia
— other rare causes
[cite]
Critical Care
Compendium
Chris is an Intensivist and ECMO specialist at The Alfred ICU, where he is Deputy Director (Education). He is a Clinical Adjunct Associate Professor at Monash University, the Lead for the Clinician Educator Incubator programme, and a CICM First Part Examiner.
He is an internationally recognised Clinician Educator with a passion for helping clinicians learn and for improving the clinical performance of individuals and collectives. He was one of the founders of the FOAM movement (Free Open-Access Medical education) has been recognised for his contributions to education with awards from ANZICS, ANZAHPE, and ACEM.
His one great achievement is being the father of three amazing children.
On Bluesky, he is @precordialthump.bsky.social and on the site that Elon has screwed up, he is @precordialthump.
| INTENSIVE | RAGE | Resuscitology | SMACC