The cerebellum is involved in the
coordination of voluntary motor movement, balance and
equilibrium and muscle tone.
It is located just above the
brain stem and toward the back of the brain. It is relatively
well protected from trauma compared to the frontal and temporal
lobes and brain stem.
Cerebellar injury results in
movements that are slow and uncoordinated. Individuals with
cerebellar lesions tend to sway and stagger when walking.
Damage to the cerebellum can lead
to:
1) loss of coordination of motor
movement (asynergia),
2) the inability to judge
distance and when to stop (dysmetria),
3) the inability to perform rapid
alternating movements (adiadochokinesia),
4) movement tremors (intention
tremor),
5) staggering, wide based walking
(ataxic gait),
6) tendency toward falling,
7) weak muscles (hypotonia),
8) slurred speech (ataxic
dysarthria), and
9) abnormal eye movements (nystagmus).