A 42-year-old man presents to the emergency department with vertigo that is worse with head motion as well as vomiting, but has no headache or abdominal pain. You receive sign-out from a colleague in ...
The prognosis of spontaneous vertebral artery dissection is excellent, with redissection rare. [1] Recanalization of the artery demonstrated on neuroimaging occurs in two thirds of patients by 6 ...
Difficulty balancing or an inability to do so can be caused by any number of factors. Head injuries, migraines, alcohol use, ear infections and medications can all affect your musculoskeletal system ...
The patient's symptoms of hiccups, dizziness, headache, and falling to the right associated with examination findings of anisocoria, normal strength, decreased pain on the left leg, and ataxia are ...
Apraxia is a neurological disorder that affects the mental processes involved in planning, task performance, and more. Ataxia is a neurological sign affecting muscle coordination and movement.
What does the CT show? The CT is normal, but it is the wrong study if you are concerned about a central cause of vertigo. A brain CT should be considered to rule out a bleed. Do not let a normal CT ...